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Mt. Vernon Republican (Mount Vernon, Ohio : 1854), 1865-08-01

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Terras ; of 'MtcrtLii: A tlMlt NEWSPAPER, . , . KNOX COtfNXY." ! poe(Oi10llre(Olnrllot..j.. ....... H ( Oa. Minis 9 months f On. .qnar. 1 yiear,...... Two'uinare. 1 mob thw,. . .. t b0' ... u o i..'W ... ae os :., j v ... so vo ... so oo IJ SO' 90 1 $250 PES YEAK-IV ADVASCE. WM. T, J3ASCOM, ' orsiiToa, riinigii aid atiroa, ' " "'" ' ' v OFFICS IK KREMLIN BLOCK, Su BTont. . ' Two afuare. 1 rear,.. . , H Colnnn Smontha, if Column 1 year, ,1 ii Coltuaa9nioiAh,.MM..a.... Cffldran 1 yo.r,. . . 1 Column t month.,... ... 1 noidrdnifir,j..A.i..'.j..4. devoted to Politics, LiTEitATUitic, the mahkets and arzisiiziiA.r intkiioence 1 fi Da.fnewCard., notc.eMlitg Unel per ye.r',.'. t Notice, la local ootnmn, 4 lln.i abd leas 60 oes's, ovif . a tva line., ten eenUpwllne, Admlnlstrktl.n, m.d, ittachieht,,Sltnrc., and Iran ,'lant alvertliinnta muat b paid ror before lnaovtln. JOB'tWOHK: " . All kinds don promptly, In .opevlor .lyLitp be paid tor on dell very. MOttf T yEHNON, OHIO, TUESDAY, AUGUST 1, 1865. NO o9. H i VciHon 'Kepulttcan: t ... V 1 - , . - ,. , irl.i " '! : ''vi v-'-l 1 !' ' -' 8. K. ft NB. l-HANOK OF TIM?. ,. ' fa. Winter arrangement on iht 8. at K. B B. lu keen Ixed, and tha time, for leaving Mt. Vernon an M followi: r nun soma iooth. If.lt Wat. Mr.-;."...,.,..........J:H . . locoranuvlulo taa...4...i..... 4:M r. M. Xipreu Ieare.'.-;;.;1...... ...... ToaS r. M. , , taaittMtMiw,: . Malt loawa-.-ii l......l:40 r, . Aecommndatioa leVfSs..... ..........7:41 A It. fexpre.. leave.,.. 71i a at. r?!' On the Central Ohm Road leave Newark aa follow.: Going hait, :40 A.M. .'UTrf,Hft.mM,MMi...AtV.IM h N, " , ..'.,.JT.!,.....i..i...4 t:H 1. K. , On the P.XJ. 0. road going Ea.t, the can leav. " Newark,. :40 a. . t, ...... ........... ll:no M. tJologWeat, being oij tlie Central Road, thejr loava aa above. CHUKCH DIBECTOET.Ql: 6ISCTPLES CHURCH, Vine Street, between Osy and MeKan.ie, Service, every Sabhath at iaX o'clock A. M.endlK o'clock P. K. 8abbalh School t0 o'clock A. M. r..,-... . . BLlk R. MQFrETT. . EVANGELICAL' 'LUTHERAN CHt'Ron. ' Fandosky Street. Rev. J. F. SHEARER. Fastol. FRESBYTERrAN CIIURCfl, corner Gay and Che.t-natitraeta : ReT. HERVEy. METHODIST EPIsqOPAL CHURCJT, comer Gay and Cheetnat itreeta. ReT. E. H. BUSH. "PROTESTANT EPISCOPAL CHURCH, comer Gay and Hlgh.treets, . Rer GEO. B. REESE CATROLIO CHCRCn, corner High and MeKen.le, , .. . ; Rer. JULIUS BRENT. METHODIST PROTESTANT CnURCII, ' Mechanic atront between Vina and nigh. "BAPTIST CnrrRCH, Vina etreet, between Mulberry and Uechirnlea. Rer. J. W, ICENRARGER. CONHRECATTONAL CnrRCIL? Molherrynt.. between 8ugaya.nd, PtolranH r Rot. T. 8. MQNROB. UNITED PRESBYTERIAN, corner Main and Rnnr treetal ,, '; ; fa i ,JleT. 8. Jt. HUTCHI80N. . METHnrfrt1 ilrESLEY'Alf 'CHUHCn, corner Vul. berrf id Wooster. , ' ReT. MR. TRAVIS. ' i i : , - "... k mm BUSINESS CAES). 'qb, POTWIH', . WHoCs; ALE, AND RETAIL GROCER,- ' . itty8,Cash for - BUTTEll, t,G6S, 'RAGS, 0 ATS, ETC. :v n-iTitg ,r ,y t h aj -.i f 'iVholeulaand Rotill Dealeraln - BdOTS & SHOES, LAfm, OSii A.tD FIjois ' ,.M ,-,:), . j- 'j.;:?,v.:; ' ) . .f.. " Si' Xu" TATTLOB 55 CO. tea- ,M .,r.Vm'- , , -;. Dry;poods;andJ(6lions, .tV! ir. S PAY-CASH. FpR ' , ... . ', , SUTTER, EGGS, RAGS, AC.-. " ;;'-. .-.v. j . . . ; if U' : "'" v,.., J: ATTORNEY 1 , V wJA'i? COUNSELLOR JIT IJIW. PLAIN AND ORNAMENTAL i. PAINTING, GRAINING t ' AND PAPER BANGING. .' ; , '? Miss Ml AT PONlfELLY, " 7 "";j;'r MILLINER ; :' 1--'AND Ja:A.3SrTAXT3Wi:AKEIl,' Mk Vamon, March M, UM-lr. .-Mi..:. : -tw ' IV ' I' ' ' . : ' " i . ' i CEO. W. MORGAN, ; Attoroyuij;ILin.w-: . OFFICE Orer aha Shoe Store of Mlllor k White, MOUNT YERNjOtCoHIO , Mareh HHi, 186J-lr -' ' j. - "V f.MAIlCn Dtlv 18C4. . ; ' . WARNER MILLER, - 13 RECEIVING FRESH . ' "- NEW GOODS Pd'chmd a'nse the Great Decline In Pricei. All thatwanl Soodl, call at ' ' March W, ISM.. .., '.. ,.. WARNER MILLER'S. Mrs. IJarris & Johnsoiij On Watt Gmliier SI near 2d H ard &hoU Building. ARVI prepared to do W ork In the moat approved atjle, either in Straw, Silk, or Cr.e. They keep a good aaaortmcnt of Ribboni and other Trimlpg. Mar 1,1804. '. .' ' L. R. BROWN, XT Ilomoeopatliio . Tly iclan, OFFICE- Woooward Balldlngi Main Street, , Marin, 186-lr, MT. VERNON, O. t AMERICAN HOUSE, .. ROSS IIANLIN & CO.. Proprietors. a. nosa unn, IT, I SEWAKK, OHIO. , ' ; ',' tJunM,lSS-lyl s. L. OARDHRH j, a. mui. . JUST .RECEIVED AT " . CLOTHING STORE ! - ; 'v ',, ,A 8plendld auortment of ,.. ;;. READHIADE CLOTIIKC! AND Qwrs FunNisnwG GOODS pl,HM rl!,nd I will tU Ua.4 laMJUtf.. ..T-. v.i . TO U low U DOrKthl. . . ,f. Ktixr MUN'K flUB SI'ECIFIC rll.I. will ffl-.-rt a riMM-Mur cure of X ear cane of Srminal l'raAritcrf ur. Jnrolwttaiy Mlktty or Daily ton bnweTer caused, or howernr aerer.; whl'e tbe will epeedllr correct tbone MORHID OMDinntffl ari.ing from tba original. llae or from BecrptViee - THE SPECIFIC PILL I" eqnellr foiled to the treat, rnentnf ererf .ecicof Grmttai or Crinary irritability, "Umu," f -Bririrdust," depoeila In the Urine, "IfVAa'' H'rhnrrp end HcffAr th AiWujr.. PR'iKK'-llONAl. OPlNrON".-1'! here n..d jrmr Sraoirm Pii,l In itianr cae "I fiptrmatorrhm aith the nr.t perfc-4 lucc'Jl, '' V. Miltok BAJiDisa, M. D., L. ID. 7 ' 'f hfre r'ir.l rTy trrrrt cos: with from pit to tea nWn nf rnr rvine Pitt. '-R. K:itK. M. D. V i-r fl ii r I 1. mt b'j fir f V t ' mail. A'MraM f. Vt.s-ct ,i. So.M John St, ff. T. , - 1- , lees. ' . i PESXSILVANU CENTRAL' It. lt. . i ; ' . DOUBLE TRACK HOTJTC rao PITTSBURGH - TO PniLADELPDIA ' From oil porllona of tlio Vcgt, North ' We.t and South-WeBt, thia line and it. connection, form either the ahorteetor the beet route to Philadel. ?hia. Now York, Bo.too, Baltimore and Wuhlngtoa. h. traveller may with conrideuce relr npon euro ceia-neotion. high .peed with perfect aafety, feud every fep pltance for comfort that ctin bo procured. New and elegant paaeenger care, for day and night if rvice, have recently been added to the equipment of the Penn.yl rani Central Rail Road. At Plttebnrgh, train, from th. Went run direct to th. Union Depot, whrre paeaengora am tmiitferred to tba 'Tr.ioa of the Peon.rlvania Central Railway, which leawe PitUbargh and arrive atotber point, a. follower DAT l XPKKiS-ln Plttiburgh at 3.60 A. M.. .topping at Prinrlnal Ulatlon.. Arrive! at AHoona t.fto A M., Tyrone M A. M. (Belleninta 10.32 A. M LotkHavnn IU.iM) P. M.,) Harrlaburgt at 1.10 P;M, Baltimore at 6.4 P. M., New York, via Allenlown, at 10 SO P, M.,.PWUdolphlaJ att 44 P, M., and New York, via Philadelphia, at 10.87 P. 11.. -IvIAIIi LINE. Leava. Plttunnr at t DO A, M., etfipp.Bg at all reirolar Station.. Altoonaf atlldoA. M., HarriubnrgtO OO P. M., arririnir at Philadelphia at 11.20 P.M., and New York, via Philadelphia, at t.O A.M.'. . j 1 :' i ' j .) , i . . . -, . PITTsnCItCH ANO F.MIS MAIL. Leave. Pitteburgh at 1,30 P. M. Stopping at nearly all Station. Arrive at Altnonat at 7. 'JO p. M , llarria-burg 1.25 A. M., and Philadelphia at 40 A. M. PHILADELPHIA E X P H E 8 Sf Leave. Pltt.burgh at 4.26 P. M. etopping only at Principal Sta. tlona. Arrive, at Latrobet 6.10 P. M., Altnona at U P. M , Harriaburgat 2 80 A. M. Ballimorr T.OO A M , New York, via Allentown, 10.00 A. M., Phllvtelphll at 7.06 A. H., and New Yorkf via Philadelphia, 12 00 M. JSltepiug - Can run thronph on tbia tmln from Pittaburgh to Baltimore and.Ptiiladelphia, and to New York via AlUntown. FAST LINE Leave. Plttabargb at t.30 P. M. Stopping only at principal Station. Arrive, at AHoona at 2 30 A. M.. Harriiburg at 7.30 A. M.fi.lllmnrct at 12 20 P. M Ne V Vork.t via Allentown, at 2.46 P. M., Philade'.phiat, 12 40 P. II and New Yorkt via Philadel-phla..at 6.42 P. M. freakfoLtl. . t Di'imer. . . t Svppet. , . f Daily, all other rraini Sundajt excepted. TICKETS FOR SALE TO BOSTON BY BOAT OR RAIL. .oat TirKSTS onon nir akt nP tiix bound ' Liataa. ' ' FAEE'IO AIL POIUTSAS LOW AS ANY R0CTB. SLEEPING'CARS': ... 0.1 KiaHT TRAIXH TO PH'IAD'A NEW YORK & BALTIMORE. o BAGGAGE CHECKED THROUGH AND TRANSFERRED FREE. THE PENNSYLVANIA RAIL ROAD CO. Will ootMfiome Rnj risk for BaRi!, vvct?pt for Wowing A ii parol, and I'mit their reniMmsibllity to One Hut dretj bullan la Taluc. All Bag(rTjt exceediDjf that Amnunt in value, will be at the rlik or the vwner, unlraa taken by upecial contract. FREIGHT. By thl. Rente Freight, of afl de.erlption can he (forwarded to and from Philadelphia, New York, Bostnb. or Baltimore, to and from, any point on the Railroad, of Ohio, Kentucky, Indiana, Illinoia, Wisconsin, Iowa or Miaaouri, bf Hailroad direct- The Pennaylvania Central Rail Read alao connect, at Pittaburgh with Steamera, by which Good, can be fn. warded to any acceaaible port on the Ohio, Mirakinguni, Tenneaae, t'nmlierland, Illinole, Miaaiaaippl, Mlaaourt, Arkanaa.and Red Rivera; and at Cleveland, Sandnaky and Chicago with Steamer, to all Porta an the North-Weatem Lake.. Merchant, and ahlpper. entrusting the tranapnrtatlnn of their Freight to thiaConiuany, can rely with contl-dence on ita apee'lv tranait. , THE RAIEj Or PRKlGUTtoand from any point In the West, by the Pennaylvania Central Rail Rnkdire at all time ai JaxaralM ai an charged tiy other Hail Mood Vomjianict. ...... , f jpr Be particular to mark g ckagea '-tia Pikx'a Ckitual R. K. For KtelghUContrart. or Shipping Direction., apply to or addreea either of the following. Agent, of the Coin- l"i'J 8. H. KINGSTON. Jr., FrelKht Agent. Philada, 3. A CAKl'ENTKR, Freight Agent, Pittaburgh . CLARKE ft CO , Tritnafer Agent, Pittaburgh. , - H W. BKOWNI CO , Cincinnati, Ohio. R. C. MKMIKUM fcCO., Madlaon, Indiana. 1IOKF.HKAD & CO., Lnuiaville, Keutucky. W. M AIRMAN. Evnnav lie, (nd.-It. r. MAMS CO. St. I.oula. Miaaouri : - CLARKE A CO., Chicago, Illinoia. J. II. McCDl.M. rnrteinnuth, O. J M. LOVE, Mnvaville, Ky. HALL ft C(t, Marietta. O. ' R AYI1KS. Mnnkingum River. O. W.H E. L I.AN01.EY, Galllpoll., 0. U.S. PIERCE k CO., .aneavillo, O. N H. HUDSON. Ripely, O. E D. MKLDRCM, General Travelling Agent. . LlVEST0CK. . DroTfrnAntl Farmera wllV-flnd thhi a mnut ndrant. gttona ronte for Lire Stock, Cpacions Yarda, veil wate.ed and unpplfed with eyerr conTenlenc, hare been opened no thin line and it connection, end ever attftutlon In paid to the(r wants. Fruin Hnrriburj(, where will be fimnd every eonvplrnce for fepdinff (tnd rcufinjp, a choice in offered of PHILADELPHIA, NEW YORK aad B, MIMOUR MARKETS. Thin will a We f'ttind the nlmrtent, qnfckent and mont direct Toute for Stork to New York lia Allentown and witl fewer chanffPfi thn nt othtr. EN07H LEWIS. flen'l Superintendent, AHoona, Pa HENRY W. OWINFER. 0en'l Ticket ARent. Phlla H. II- HOUSTON, Oen'l Freight Agent, Phila. - . June 20-6ft. A' pamphlet directing how to peedllr rxstorb pioiit and Kve up jpactaclen without ail or Doctor or medicine, wot bv mail free on receipt of 10 cent". ! Adilmi .:. H, B. FooTa, M. P., ft Deo, iiO, lHtU-ly. 1130 Broadway, N. Y. MOUNT VERNON UNIQORASSBAND. rpHlSANo' lllnowWrrrinptetely urganiMd,' and la X good healthy i-Aqdiliorii It. harfaeholce .election ol Mnatc and nA'li-i coipete.nt4n.troctlnn has arrived at prolrklency 111 iitniMliwI 'eiecntinn. It I. ready to fill all call. f(i piuairal aervlceiKrat home or abroad, on reaaonab1elotm,filtfi'erTt Cotillion Partie. or for Bra. Mu.le.' ' " W: M: TiiOMPdON, Pre.'t. S. 0. Rjw.. ,Mdi. - (Dee. la.lWtf. Howard rAssociation.' 'VipHILADKLTHlA.-'PA.::!!: v' Dlaeaaea oftte NCrrous, Seminal, Urinary and Boxual Systema new and reliable treat ment in ReporU rf the HOWARD A8S0DIATION Sent by mail in sealed letter envelnpee. free of charge,' Addre.., Dr. J. 8K1LI.EN HOUGHTON, How.rd Aaao-al.tlon, No. X South Ninth Street, Philadelphia, Pa.-Doe. ih, lDM-lr. ; . . , . , KENYON HOUSE, j- Corner of Malufit, and the Pnbllc Pqotre, I ' ' " .-".: - MOUNT VERtfON. 0. ' nAVINOLeawd lhl w.fl known and popular Hotel, and Atted it up in superior style, t am prepared to accommodate travelera aod all other, who may giv. m. a call. The Datronag. of the Public I. rewertfulty o- lidted, ' : JOSEPH SOARBROUGH, MajJ,I865-ly. ; 1 ' . ' . , LECTURE nil Pultithed M A Sralsd Envtinpe. ' Price SU CbtUr- A Lecture on the Natiire, Treatment and Ratllc&l Care of Spermatorrtioea or Seminal Weak-cm, Itivolurrtary Emisnionn, Pesual DeblUly, and Im-Bedionenta ta Mairiafr jreeerftlly.. NervoONneM, Cnn-umplion, Kpilepney, and fiia; MeoUl ad Phyical In-tanaritr. reilnnii from 8elf Almxe. Hr ROBT J CULNKRWCLL, V. D., Anthorof the"flreeo Book," e. - ' i - . ... The World renowned anthor, In tbia admlrwMe Lee' .tare clearly provea from bii own experience that tba awful eooeeqneneM of 8 If-A bote may be effectually removed wHhoat medlclae, and-wttbentdnreroaaiar Jical uperatfone, houRif. Innlmmentfl,' ring, reor-laid, pofnUnf out a mode of eara at once certain and ffectual. br wlileh every uil'erer. n wjattefwbat bU eowdiUoa may be, may cure hiinelf cheaply, privately and radirallr. THIH LKC1UMK Wil l. PKOVJt A BOONTOTHOtSANDfl AND THOC3AN03. Sent under net: to anr addren. ia a plain, tealed en velope, on the receipt of ail cents, or two postage BUmp, bv Hlrting CHAS. J. 0, KLIN I ft Ca , ' 137 Bowory, Jf. Poat-Office Box 45804. June 80, lM.V7vo. IBOLTIWG ; THE BEST IJiror.TED. ! .. ' , Fox Salt by .... " . . Nor.'21, V t ly. , , TllE bt.b CANOE, W her. t)i. rnck. are gray, and ItleJ shore Ja staep, , , . And the waters beloW look dark and deep. Where the rugged pine, in its lonely pride, ; Leans gloomily over the niUrky tide ; ' Whera the reds and ruahe. are long and, .rank, And the weed, grow thick on the windiuH4ank ; Where the ahiulnw ia heavy (he Whole day through, Lie. at It. moorlhg. the old canon. . !;; : . ,'1 .-r. .- ::T '. The uii'leat paddles are Idly dropped, ',' if Like a sea-bird'a winga that the atorni ha. lorrped,' "And crowed on the raillhg, on. o'.r on., ' Like the folded bond, when tb. work i. don. Vt bile bually beck .nd forth between, ; ., , . : . , The aplder stretcite. hia silvery arn-eo, ' And th. solemn owl, with hi. dull "loo-boo," - .-Settle, down ou th. .id. of th. old canon. ,,, .. i ' . . -) ., ,.- Tim alern half sunk In the slimy ware; ' ' ' Hot. .lowly away In It. living grave, -mi ' i:: And th. gr.en moa. oreep. o'er 1U dull d.cy. r Illdingll.nioiiMrrliigduat.wsy,., ' . Like the hand that plant, e'er thedowih a Bower, ' ' ! Orthelvy ihtn mantle, th. f.llen towrr j . -., Wjiile hiutiy a hlnaaom of lovelleat hue, 1 it , Springs up o'er the .'ern of the old canoe,- ' 1 . ' t .' .. :, '. :. . , '., ,!, -. The cblTPhllrsii waves are dead and tl1l - ' i'i 1 But the light wind plays with the boat at will, - And Imily in aud out again i f , It Boats the length of the rusty chain, 1 ' 1 '' ' Like tho wear march of the b.ml. ol timei i : " That meet and part at the noootlde chime. And the shore l. kissed at erh turn au.w ' : ; i ' ' i By th. drippinjbow of the 014 c.oe, ,! . j , , y 0, many a tlm, fltfa t e.rela heni), i' j ; I have puahed It away from the pebbly slrtthdj And paddled It down where the stream mm qulck Wbere the wbirla are wild nd th, eddlea are thick-' And Isughed as I leaned o'er the rocking e iOe, And Im.ked below in th. hrokl n tide, To aeo that the facos and boats were twn ;. c .-i. That were mirrored back from the old oanoa. . . Buloow,asIlesnji'erthecrnniMI'iirldei 1 . - ' ' And look below in th. elngsrlah tide, I ' r Ttie far. that I we there is graver grown, ; ,, And Hie laugh that I hear has a soberer tone, And the h.nilsthat lent to the light akilf wings, ' 1 Have grown familiar with Sterner tiling, , , . , ' But I love to think n(tbe hour, that flew , A. I rocked where the whirls their w'llto .pray threw, Era the bio. mm w.ved,r tb. green tfrasa grew. O'er the mouldeiing .tern of the old canoe. j How be Came to be Married- It may be funny, but l'v done it I've got a wife and a baby. Shadows departed oyster sttws, brandy cock-tails,' cigar boxes, bootiacks. abscoiidine shirt buttons, wbiet and demijobri. Shadows present hoop skirts, bund boxes, ribbons, garters, Iodr stockings, juvenile dresses, tin trumpets, little willow j eliair?, cradles, Dius, paps, sugar teats, pare-soric, hive syrup, rhubarb, senna, salts, (quills, nd doctor bills Shallows'- iuturs more pound babies, more Live syrup, etc., etc. I'll just tell you bow I got caught .. 1 was always the darndest rnost lea cusiara oiisniui it'iiow you ever did seo ; it was kinder in my line to be taken with the shakes every time I saw a gal approaching me, and I'd cross the street ,1. ,1 r.. . ,na. Ka. any lllliu ruiuwr uiuu iui-o nun , iw.oui u- caus I didn't lik the critters, for I was be-1 hind the fence looking at them tlirough a knot hole. .1 couldn't look, at one long enough. Well, my sister Lib gave a party oDe night and I stayed away from homo because I was too bashful to face the music. I bung around the house whistling "Old Dnn Tucker," dancing to keep my feet warm, wufbhing the heads bobbing jop nod down behind the window curtf ins, and wishing the thundering party "Would break up, so I could get to my room. 1 smoked up a uuncu ot cigars, nna as ic was gettiug late and mighty uncomfortable, I concluded to shin up the door post No sooner .aid than done, and I soon found myself song in bed. " , 'Now,' says I, 'let her rip I Dance till your wind gives ouL" And coddling under the quilts, Morphens grabbed me. I, was dreaming of soft shell crabs and slewed tripe, and having a good time, when somebody knocked at the door and woke me up. 'Bap' again, - I laid low. 'Rap, rap, rnp I' Then Ihcard a whispering, and I knew there was a whole raft of guls outside. 'Bap, rap 1' Then Lib sings out : ' '. 'Jack, are you there ?' Yes,' says I. Then came a roar of laughter. , 'Let us in,' said she, ; ' 'I won't' 8"id I, 'can't yon, let ft fellow alone V : ; .. ... - 'Are you a-bed ?' says Bhe. 'I em,' says I, Oct out,' says she. 'I won't says L !' " Then came another langb. By thunder I . I begau to get riled. ; 'Get ont, you potticouted scarecrows 1 ' cried I ; 'can't yon get a bean without hauling a fellow out of bed t "I won't go home with you I won't so you may clear out !' And throwing a boot at the door, I felt better. But presently oh 1 mortal buttons 1 I beard a still, small voice, very much like sister Lib's, and it Baid : ' 'Jack, you'll have to get up, for all the girls' things are there.'. ' . . Oh. Lord, what a pickle 1 Think of me in bed, all covered with shawls, muffs, bonnets and cloaks, and twenty girls outside the door waiting to get in I If I had stopped to think I should have pancaked on the spot As it was I rolled ont among the bonnet ware and ribbons in a harry. Smash went the millinery in every direction. 1 1 l ad to dress in the dark for there was a crack in the door, and the girls will peep andv the way I fumbled about Was death on straw hats. " I opened the door and found myself -right among the women..i.' -si.- '.i , i ; i. ) .'.,.' ; ;'Ob, my Leglorn I cried, one. 'My. dear, darling wintefVelvet P. cried another, and they pitched in they pulled me this way and that, boxed my ears, and one bright-eyed little piece Sal, her name w. as put ber arms right round my neck, and kissed me right on my lips.'1 Human nature donldn't stand that and I gave her as good as she sent. ..It was. the first time I ever got the taste, aud it . was powerful good. I believe I could have kissed that gal from JnliuS Cesar to the Fourth of July; TJ-I" "-'- I .i..'.!-!-"' f. Ill .' 1. T.I. I- Vack,' said she, i.'we are. sorry to disturb you, but won't yoo see me home V ,. ; --"Ves,' saili I, 'I will.'.' ' '." " i"". ; , I did do It and bad another smack ai the gate, too. After that we took A kinder turtle dove after each other, both of ns sighing like barrel of new cider. when we were awsy from each other,' Twos at tbe close of a glorious summer day tba iuu was setting-, be hind distaut ben-roost w truu-lrogs were commencing their evening songs, and polly-wogs, la their native mud puddles, were preparing themnetves for the shades of night and Hal and myself sat on an antiquated black log, listening to the-music of nature, such ftn-tree toads, roosters and granting pigs, and how nd then the music of a jackass was wafted to our ears' by the) gentla sephyrs' that sighed araong the niullen stocks, and came heavy laden with the delicious odors .of ben-roosla and pig styes. The Inst lingering fays of the gettiug son glnuciug from tlia buttons of . a golltaiy horsomnn, shone through a knot bul in a hog peri full in Sal's fdee, dyeing her hair anoruDge peel line, una lUfowinp on my Iliread bare cdut to a bad advantage ; one cf my arms was around Sal's waist, my band resting On the email of her back, she was toying witli my auburn locs of jet black. bn : she was almost gone, "and I' was' ditto.' She laotti like a grasshopper dying with the hicenp., and I felt like a mud-turtle cbohoa wlln codfish bull, . i '8al,' says I, In a voice as musical as the notes of a dying swan! 'will you have me V ! - She turned hor eyes heavenward, clasped me by the hand, bad an attack of the heaves and bliud staggers, with a sigh that drew ber shoestrings to ber palate, said : .;; 'YeSl', . .... ' ,', . .' ( " Bhe gave clear out' 'hen, and squatted io my rnp. ,1 hugged her till l broke mysus pendufs, and bur preatb smeilutl.or ouions she had eaten two weeks before. ',' Well, to niuke a long story short she sat the day, and we practiced for four weeks every nigh, how we woflld entpf the room tp'be marriod, till we got so wo corjH walk as g'rnca-flilasacc'uple'ofMOscoyy duths. Thonight the company and the minister came, thesiguul was given, and arm iu arm we marched through the crowded halt We were just eu'ering the fjarlor door, when dowa I went kerslap on the oilcloth,' pulling Stil after me. . Some cussed fellow had dropped a biinana skin on the floor and it Hoofed me. It split an awful hole la my carsimersi right under my dress coat tail. 'At was too late to back out ; so - clasping my hand over it we marched in and were spliced and taking a seat I watched the kissing-the; bride operation.' .My groomsman was tight and he kissed her till 1 inmped up to tako a slice, when, oh, horror! a little six-year old Imp had crawled behind me and polled my shirt through the bole in my pants, had pinned it to the cbttir, end jumping np I displayed to the admiring gnKe of tba astonished multitude a trifle more white mnslin than was pleasant The women giggled, the men roared, and I got mad, but was finally put to bed and there my troubles ull esded. 4Jood Bight ; ' A Visit to Baron Yon Llebls. the , Great Agricultural Chemist- .' Mains; (Mayence) June 17, 1805. ' Nelson 3. Turnev, Esq, ' r -' 1 '' " ' ' I'reiiddit Ohio Slate Boari Jlgriculluret , Dear Sir : On Wednesday last I left the old city of Stuttgard foe, itunchen, (Munich) by way of Ulm on the Daimho,and Augsburg, the old ciry where the Lutheran Confession of Faith was concerted. I went to Muncherrl on purpose to see Baron -Von Liebig,' the great Agricultural Chemist of the world. He wrote the first book on Agricultural Chemistry, and has written the trest books wo have on the subject. He received me not only cordially and kindly, but very warmly, and gave me really the warmest welcome aud reception I received inJurope. He commenced at once on the subject of agriculture in Ohio; said ho had read all my reports with great interest and had expected to find me a much older man. After spending half an hour in conversation not necessary to be repeated here, 1 mentioned to him. the purpose of my visit ; told him we were about to found an Agricultural College, told bim of the prospective fund, etc, etc.: lie told me that he would be very bappy te give me bis views upon the subject, but wished me. to understand every point clearly, and not misrepresent or misunderstand him, as so many bad already done. The snm and ttibstance was this, aod he gave his reason for such conclusion i , , t . . , , THE BARON'S VIEWS .ON TUB ESTABLISHMENT OP ; THR OHIO AGRICULTURAL SCHOOL DANQRRS , TO BE AVOIDED. V " '. ; ''In Ohio yon do not want to bui'd tpaluce fur an Agricultural School. In America you spend too much money in putting up your eduoational buildings, and then starve your professors. I learn (he said) that yoq put up a very grand building in yur city of Columbus called the Starlin(fMedieal College ; I have a picture- of it I am told itcost some 870,000 or $73,000, and now you are starv iog the professors in if Toil did tho same in Cleveland, and in Cincinnati. .' Then I am told you bnilt (mo Universities in Ohio, and note the professors can barely live on the salary you pay. , The consequence is, that these Schools, Colleges or Universities mutt run down. There is no place in the whole world whore knowledge can make so much money as in America ; therefore, your best men will not become teachers 0' professors, simply because they can make moro money out of something else ; and they naturally apply their talent and ability wbere it pays the best. No man will engage in an educational course of life for lift on a salary of $1,200 or$l,500 a year, wheu ho, by applying the same ability in some other pursuit can make $4,000 to $5,000 a year.' Hence, yon have no firtt clan profettori in all America but you have Mislead first class business men, first class mechanics, and managers of large and colossal establishments.' Now, I am afraid that out of your large fund of money yoo wjll think that yon must at least bnild another ''Starling College,' or even a yet more expensive establishment You want an ordinary good building, but yon don't want the twentieth part there is at -Hohenhetm. ' Then, too, I am afraid that after yon have your buildings yon will employ thjrd or fourth rate professors, and yon will find that yoar establishment will languish ( aDd your standard of attainments' jvill be very, low. . These are your great dangers. - Ou the othor baud, with an ordinary and convenient building.jSVsf rale profettori and well paid, you may rest- assured that Ohio will take high raoL in the agricultural WHO SHOULD BE MANAGERS OF SUCH A!f IK8TI-; I TDTIOM. . ,,. ,. : ! "The manager or .director of the establishment should be a man thoroughly versed in scientific agriculture ; because the experimental farm, is for the purpose of making experi ments purely, ' and dot for the purpose Of maintaining or supporting ,tae ocnooi. j no scientific director can see that the proper experiments are-made ; and these experiments shonld always be made in direct consideration of being put into general practice ; that is, they should all tend to producing the gnateit crops at' the least expense, and without ex-haustiflj! tht toil, and of courso be of inch a character that all the farmers may availthem-selves of' the methods - because,' if your experiments cost more than the' crops amount to, nobody will repeat tbem, and yon have made no advance in agriculture, although you may have solved a problem, or ascertained a fact r vet for agriculture generally, it it of nd value. If, on the other land, yoar director is a practical man only, and not a scientific man, he is only repeating on the experimental farm : what bt -perhaps- being. done on- every well-regulated farm in the. State; and thereof you are making no progress.. Yon can never persuade a practical director to make proper scientific experiments." ' - -J ' : -- SCtRNCK AND KXrgRIMRNT THS BARONOB-" ' ; '.- I ftCtt TO A "MODEL .FARM."' ., , Ul'V t 'At thia poini Prof.' Liobig"gave me a detailed aceonnr of the -'Conflict between the prartjnol director at Uohenleim and the scientific professor?. These profeasors claimed , that thrt director was using up the capital of the institution, and wax not living tin the in-tome a the director maintained the past ten J Joart demonstrated that the prol''sorn wnrs right although they were unable to have their doctrines pnt Into practice. . "You don't want much land,"- coutinned Liebig ; "a few hun dred acres Is all sufficient for all manner of experiments and you must allow me to re peat you want to tnafe.9. erpertmehtt only. You, don't want to teach a specific system of model farming for many reasons firstly, not one student perhaps, cad get a larm precisely liko your irodel furm ; he may hot be able to get so much grass land, or so much nplnud, or may be unable to have firm buildings precisely like '.'the model Ciies. Then, what good does your model do when nooooy cun copy it f And to co y a pari of the model impretsti the ignorant that lue wuoie is cop led, and the results in copying a part cauuot be as great pr as bcneflciul materially as . if the whole were copied ; and yet the moral effect is, that that pari represents the whole. Therefore, I would uot advise model farming. Uohenheim sot out with the ide of being a model furm when there were not half a doaen estates of the same extent or reotogical struo- tare in all Wnrtemburg : and, as a mattof or .. .. V course, it must fail as a model, for nobody but kings and princes could copy it bmall farmers could not even attempt it Confine yonr institution to experiments, and as for practice you have every day at your service the prac tice of the whole fotate of Uhio. Let the stu dents visit the best farms Jn the State, and see how things aro managed, and it will do them more good than if you undertake to carry ont the 'model idea.' .Now, when you get hose, pray do not misrepresent this idea. I want you to make experiments ; not simply to show what can be done, but make experiments to show what can be done profitably. and what may be done by any intelligent farmer. Of course you cannot expect to accomplish much for the present generation of farmers, but the seeds you bow will be reaped by the coaiiug and future generations," tub faults or tur okrmah schools. : I asked bim if( In bis opinion, the schools at llohenbeimj Eldeua, and Tharand, and Others I bad visited, bad accomplished any good for agriculture f He instantly replied. "A'o tbey have impeded ruther .than pro gresced it ' But they have shown us how much learning can be used to do purpose. I nave been fighting these schools lor the past 25 years, aud it is from them that the greatest opposition to me comes. Yo must visit Saxony for rational and successful agriculture.' I told him that I had been there. We then discussed at ' some length the schools there, iu detail : Fommrita, Tharand, Blag-witz. Halle. Dr. Kuebn, Gruven, &c I have jotted down these views, lest I forget them, or get them mixed np witn tne ideas ol some other men. . : : : . i ; . : -. ; v EXPERIMENTAL AGRICULTURAL STATIONS . 7 v! PRACTICAL CUKIIISTBV. , . j I did forget to mention in the proper place, that Liebig .said we must by all means have experimental Agricultural Stations throughout the .State j if we caonot afford one ia every county, then Lave on in every Dine or ten counties at first eud let them be gradually increased. , And if your ten or twelve colleges want to do any agricultural work,, and get a name aud reputation lor actual agricultural ability, let the colleges take hold of these ex perimental stations. You say that all of these colleges pretond to tench chemistry : "of course chemistry caonot be taugnt witnout a chemist ; now just give the experimental sta tion in charge or that chemist, iou aont want anybody else to have charge off A practical man ?'' And -for what f .The practical man will only practice there what he has practiced all his life elsewhere. . In your free country the students can roam over the whole couutry and see much mora of practical agri culture iu one day, thau the practical man can teach in a month . WHAT -AMERICA'S FARMERS NEED THE AGRI CULTURAL 8YSTK11S OF DIFFERENT NATIONS. In a word, your American farmers are the best practical farmers in the world ; but they want science, or scientinc expenmcnis, to guide their practice and make it yield them threefold what it(now does. - Tho agricultural department to a college without an experi mental station, is simply nonsense ; oecause, what can you teach. that half the students do not already know from actual practice on the furm 7 Now you don t want to teach what every practical faimer already knows, because if. that is your object, men me students had better go to a practical farmer where tbey can. get wages and learn me practice at the samo time ; aud tuec uiepense wun an Agricultural College altogether. But vou waut to teach a better system of farming ; yon want to make the crops in Ohio as productive as those of Saxony. Hew will you do it-7 Certainly not by getting a practical farmer to manage a model farm lor you, ror ne knows only whut is practiced generally ; and his superior ability will consist simply in his better manage' ment over other ordinary farmers. This will be teaching financiering, And not agriculture. The only wsy you possibly can advance and dsvelop your agriculture is by experiments tpat is the. only plan. : Saxony has no secrets in her farming. Every operation is cpen to iosptction, and doue in broad day light ; but Saxony learned it only by experience. Prns-iu sent students to Tharandriiud tbey graduated and weLt to work on their estates in Prut-sia; but Saxon experience was good for oothine there." Saxony differs widely from Prussia in. climate, soil, and contour; in geological formation and everything hclonging to agriculture." Prussia then commenced her experimental schools, and now is learning rapidly; h.er agriculture is greatly improved, i You must, in 'course of time, have experimental stations in eyery county; you probablycannot anqro, mem fiou, out e yoar. population, increases; yoo will find that you will be com pelled to have them, Or else abandon your idea of being a grain and beef exporting State. There is no branch of industry ao completely bnilt up of experiment agricultnrt. Therefore, no teacher tm anybody else, can go from Germany to Ohio and grow sixty bushels of wheat to the acre lh first year. He may do it the tc'.ond, but he must have one whole year ol experience ana ooscrvauoa witu itie toil and climate before be can improve) much on yonr. -present products. So far! M cattle breeding ia couceined,.-jill of that Can be taught aod tbe experiments made at the col lege . proper, , and that will answyf for the eDtire State, and perhaps for all the northern States. And then, too, you do tot need a hundred head' of "Schwyts cattle, or tixty of Liimmertnaier, or mnery Hollanders, or forty Uldenbnrgers as iJonenheim has, and has had in funmcc timer. Aod for borse breeding you do not require royal . ttud of hundreds of thorough bred Arabians ; neither do you need shoep by the thousand to demonstrate sheep breeding and wool grow ng. A lew of each kind of cattle, horses and sheep are amp ly (sufficient " You most not Calculate in ai y sffise to derive an Income from the products of, .the experimental faim : because while Some experiments may produce considerable gain, others will Cause loss ; of conr) nobodv knows In Rdvacce which r f any two series of experiment wil.- be paying ones (in money yon should to mute ihca nit ry ; and even then yoq will Pud that oua half of Uiem will caose as much bit at (he other half has caused gain. All you want to teach at the college, are ihe principles of agiiculturo just as you would teach pure mathematics as geometry, trigonometry, and algebra; branches, or rational principles, which are applied in astronomy, navigation, surVeylng.engineer-iiigiu Tact every where, thus purely do yon want to teach these principles, then, on the experimental furm I and on the experimental stations you want io apply these principles, just at you apply geometry and trigonometry when you tcacn practical surveying auu navi gation, lo this and your institution will not oulv succeed but be an honor to your State, and a blessing to future generations.' But if you attempt to copy Hobenheirti,1 or Eldena, or any of that model furm genua, you will fi.il. Now, Mr. I 'resident 1 have endeavored to give you Liebig t views ; and Iu part bis own words translated. Into tfngiun. I was mucn pleased with this interview with this greatest chemist the world has ever produced ; and I do not thiuk it worth while spending time and money in running after the "smaller fry." TBI GREAT- lNTIBNATIONAL FAIR AT COLOONB I commenced this letter at Mayence and am finishing it at Cologne. To-day (June 19,1 1 visitnd the cceat International fair, cn which I' had been appointed a committee; The Fair, in my opinion, is a decided failure, but it will pay, because there is "lots" of beer here, and a Big Lottery counected with the Fair. There were no live stock on exhibition nothing but agricultural implements, and manufactures and wares. I ant glad I was not hero to serve as a juryman. ' ' ' 1 liespectrully, ' I - ! JOHN II." KLIPPART. Rc-construclion from an English liberal point ol views., j ? ,s The London Spectator has an able article on Uie situation in the United State. . It lays we have triumphed In the fight, but It thinks more trying ordeal Is now before us. . The process by which eleven Oligarchical States are to be changed to eleven' Democratic, and free Republict is now the gr?at test of bnr system.. , We copy a row parograhs from tha article, as they contain suggestion! worthy tho copsideration of American Statesmen, ' , In eleven States, all faithful or submissive to the Union Virginia, Kentucky, Tennessee North 'Carolina; Sooth CarOliuia,' Georgia, Alabama, , Mississippi, Florida, Louisiana, and Texas there is a silent struggle going on, nominally as to the position of the negro, really as to the question, old as civilization, whether the basis of society ia to bo equality ot privilege,- Equality : of legal rights it the strength- of the North, yet it is unwilling to ; establish it io the South by force; privilege is the passion of the South, and though de- leaieu iu tuw Krvm. o.ul3b'w tl-0 uu cognition at the keyttona of society, it cannot bear to surrender the long-enjoyed possesion. Privilege, therefore, in some shape tha "Soath" by which we iu this instance mean alt re- . t -t V. I.K .. ut.l.. In flofapmlnorl tn UUUliy VIUVCUUIUIU U1U1VD io uvwiunuv. .v retain.; In Virginia the masters, : with the fine instinct of capital for its immediate interests, have combined to fix the rate of wages for colored men at five dolars a month, just oue third the biriug price of slaves, and about one fourth the rate which the colored men, if free to work or bo idle,, would be willing to accept. - ..,(...--... If the domnlant race is' to decide without intervention, privilege is reestablished, the war with its fearful expenditure of blood and treasure and energy, will have been waged in vain and tbe Union must sooner or later be again assailed by a competing civilization. We do not, therefore, wonder that shrewd Americans, perceiving this, are splitting iuto three camps of opinion, fighting for three different schemes nf ..nlitn Dia aonlinn nmilld nOemit narllOn. would welcome, (be resalt they.perceive ativoa labored, fought and suffered through th . .: baud, but the section Ii small, and to our readers at least not worthy of very careful expos ure, The others are two branches of one great party which is resolved to prevent the rcestablishmcnf of privilege, but being resolv ed, has split upon the policy b which Its rd solve is to be attained. I'he individual state the republicans clearly perceive, must either be coerced into doing the necessary impartial justice, or made to see that it is for inter est to do it must in fact either be placed no der the Federal power, i.. in party phrase, under "military control, or must do induced to establish negro suffrage. Under the former plan, which is, we regret to perceive, slightly gaining ground, being not only much the quicker, bnt supported by the uegroes themselves, external justice would be secured, but at the certain cost of Stale rights, whicn - are of doobtlul value, and the possible risk or freedom, which is simply Invaluabla - -. Under the second scheme justice would do- secured from within, the rulers seeing it not done because they love justice,, but because they must conciliate the men whose rotas can turn the scale ror or against inomseives. Without external pressure applied irt one of these two modes the eleven Statei, at they re vive and recover their internal independence, will reestablish tbe ancient system, modified only by restrictions on the division of families, by a right to bare maintenance in cash instead of in kind, and by a restricted privilege of transfer from one estate to another, -i Those changes are gains to tbe negro, but they leave the grand structure, or privilege untouched, and allow society in the South to reconstruct itself on the1 basis of tho riubt of a dominant caste to rule tbe legally subordinated masses, that Is, oo a scheme which m a lew years must inevitably conflict once more with the scheme on which North American society is and wifi continue based.' i ;-vi-r? .;.:.'! v mr! ii-GoT. Brown of tla on SlaTQrjv - The Savannah Herald contains ao addrest by Ex Gov, Brown to the people of Georgia, in which he urires them to support not only the government or tbe united states, dui me administration of the present Chief Magistrate. He Appeal to tbern to take th amnesty oatu, and observe, itio good faith, .He argues that tlaveiy is now dead forever. At to bis own slave, he will Immediately' emancipate and treat them at free, e-iving them a part or the crop or waget for lbf--To those who can- Dot Wpport the Constitution of tho govern. ment be tuggeatt emigration rom me couuiry. ; the ?few York Times' Washington dcinatch taya effort ire 'making la "North Carolina to promote emigration, to that btrtte on att ex tensive scale.; A general Immigration agency ha been .established at Kaleiith, tnd over 100,000 acres of landman mill sites, tuwu and city lots' arribffered for sale. - ' ' The Fourtblof July was celebrafed in Au gusta, Ua., by a colored procession with b inner", on which "death to disunion and slavery," and "freedom and rqutlity" were jrs-tibed. In the wflifnorO the troi ps paraded, and in the evening thore wa a ilijilny of fireworki i The biilh Unl garrisou Chaik?" e,! : ej H Ccn- logan's Farewell to his Arcij' . .! IliAMoTiiTBiuJA anr or Tennkssk& "l i ;lynu.t,1LuJni '13Ui 1865. jj , Officers and Soldiers of tits Army of Ttnn, :: ;I The profound trratification I M in buing anthoiUMxi to release you from the onerous ob- ; ligation of the camp,, and return you laden ; with laurels, to hornet Where warm heaita wait to welcome you, is tomowhat embittered. ' I by the "Dainfut reflection that lam sundering the tiet that triabj bavnj .rutuletruei Umo mnd. , tecder, auD'eriug'. made tacrod,' perils mud; V proud, heroism made honorable and famrj made forever fearless of the futures ; . It is no common occasion that damaudt the disband-meut of a military orguniratioo, before the resistless ; power, ,-wliich,- fliQuntnius: brfettiny j. T, with bayouuts have bowed cities have surrendered, aod millions of brave men b ?en coli , quered. Although 1 have ' been but far a .-'. short period your commander, we are not strangers, affections have sprung up between; ; ; ;-us during the long years of doubt gloom and carnage, which wfc? have passed through to " gethar, nurtured by common perils, tufioringa 1-" and sai-rifirea and rfvited bv I lie memories of gallant comrades, wkoHfOoues repose beoeatb . the sod of an hundred battle fields, nor time ' nor distance will weaken or efface. The many marches you have made, the dangers you-have d&jpised.the haughtiness you have hum.-! bled, the duties yon have discharged, the glory-you have gained,' the destiny you have discovered for theoountry in whose causeyenbevo ' : conquered, all recur at this moment in all the vividness that marked tho scones through . r, which we have just passed. ' 'From the pent ' oMhe ables historians of the land, daily are drifting out upon the current qf time.pago upon :T page.-volunM. upon voluma -of youboio- deeds, and floating down lo future generations, will iuspire the student of history with admits atioD, -the patriot American with veneration . .y lor ma auicesvora, auu iuu tuvor ui repuoiican liberty, with gratitude for those who in a fresh baptism of blood re-consecrated the powers and energies of the Republic to the, cause of constitutional freedem., , Long, may It be the happy fort u no ot each and every om of yoti to live in tne run iruition or the twumiicst blessings you have secured to the human race. !! - Only he whose heart has been thrilled with admiration for your impetuous Bud unyielding valor in the thickest of the fitrht can appre ciate with what pride I recount the brilliant Is , achievements which Immoitaliw you, and en--; , 'j rich the pages of our National history. Pass-, jog by the earlier, but not less signal triumphs' r ', qf the war, in which most of you participated ' 1 and inscribed npou yoflr banners inch vk'M oriet as Donaldson and Sbilob. I recur to nro campaigns, seiges.and victories that challenge ' , tno aumirauou ot ins worm, auu riich ids uo-willing applause of all Enrobe, ' Torningyoor ' back npon the blood bathed heights of ViCkJ burg, you launched into steglqn twarming) j wilh enemies, fighting your wty and marching. fj1? without adequate .supplies, to answer the cry '. , tot succor that came to y oil from tlie nOblo but beleagnred army at ChattauoOga ' tTnr steel ivsxt flashed among the) mountaint Of toiii.i 'i' i l r i i . Itiuuesm-H, buh .your woarj innos lAtum re l befoi-e the embattled heights of .Missionary, . - KKige, and there witu duunuess courage you breastal : agaio thti-eoeroy't destrnctive :fire; and shared with your comrades of tbn Army of ; the Cumberland tho glqriest of a victory,' than which uo soldiery can boast a prouder.; , i ' ' la that Unexampled campaign of vigilant '' and vigorous warfare from Chattannooga to Atlanta, you fresh'eoed yoar laurels at Rssao- ; - ca, grappling with the enemy behind his work.,. j burling him back dismayed and broken. Pur-1 suing him from thence, marking your path by the graves of . falleu tomrades, you again tn- ''" umphed over superior numbers at Ballai, ii .& fighting your way from there toEenesaw v mi .. 1 H..3AK , t. i : 1 1 jnvuuiuiu,. auu uuuer iuw muiueruua arfctlierj y .. that frowned from its fugged heights, with a tenacity and constancy that fladt few parallels 11 VI iMitj iuia vi aw ivutuvi i j uiiuauuiiMVi ptAUl exposed the couutry in your front audhough- until at last you planted your colors upon its, j ,j topmost heights. Again on the 23d of July," 1803, rendered memorable through all time '' l for the terrible straggle you so heroically ; ''' maintained under discouraging disasters,-nnd that saddest of all refleotions, .'the'loss'of that ' exemplary soldier and popular leader, the la-meuted McPubrsob, your matchless courage)')' turned defeat iuto a glorious victory.. - Ezra-Chapel and Joiienboro, added pew lustre to a , , j radiant record, the anborring to you the proud . ' Gate City of the South. The daring of a des- .' perata foe in thrusting bit legions northward, "iq rivers, swamps and enemies opposed, you bold- j ly surmounted every obstacle, beut down all nnnnsition and marched onward to the sea.,:' VVitbout anr act to dim me ongmness or , your historic page, tho world, rsnglahdits oj wbeu your labors and struggles culminated at . ., Savannah, ud the old "Starry Banner" waved once more over the walls of one of our proud-' est cities of the seaboard,'. Scarce breath ''"U iog spell had passed when your colors faded V . from the coast, and your columns plunged in-. , to the swamps o the Carolinaa. 1 be sutler-; ,. ingjyod endured.th labors performed and thef ''1 success yon achieved in those morrnsses, deem.' ,; ed Impassable, forms o creditable :episodn in r I) the history of the . was. i ., Pocataligo, Sulka-.A hatchic, Edisto. Branchville, " Orangehurgh, ,, Columbia, Iieatonville, Charleston and KaP eigh are names that will ever be saggestive of the resistless sweep or your coinmns tnrouglv'iT'j the territory tha cradled and sutured, and i from whence was sent forth on ita mission of , crime, misery and blood, the disturbing and disorgariising spirit of secession and rebellion. 5 Tbe work ror which you ploegcd your bravo -;- a hearts and brawny sjmj to the government of your fathers, yoa have noble performed You are seen in tne past garnering inrougii the gloom that enveloped the land, rallying ' as tbo guardians of man's prendeit heritagv - jj lorgotttug the tlireaa nnweven ia id ioonv quitting ..the anvil and abandoning the work. tiiops to vindicate the snprooiacV of the laws, aud the authority of 1be constitution. 'Four " years have you struggled in the bloodiest and -b most dostrnctivo war that was ever, drenched , the earth With hnmaa gore; step by step yoo ' have borne Our sUucWd, until to-dny over' every lortf4s'! and arsenal that relK'llion wrenced from and over city town tnd hum--. 1 let from the lakes Io the gnlt, and from, ocean i to ocr'anprondly floats the "titnrry Kuililem"; lT Of oiimalionJ unity aud strens(tU, '. Totir rewards, my comrde, are tho wol- "' coming plnudibj f grateful penplp, theron.- la cioasnest that io taviugtin republic, yon fctvo ut woo for your ccontry . renewe d ro'iKct ' oivl power at home and abroad, that in tiin unor-' am pled era of growth and proeperily t!mt ' 1 dawns 'with' -peace, there attaches jr.:; U;nr j wealth ot priila and gl'"j thnn CTfr r-r.-) to.-to that loved boost . "I ant an Ameriraii c-U izen." ' . j , In telinqnishinif tbo impWiants f.f war; f-if those of pear, M yoar e&yil jet he t! i nf .warrior ia t,m of war, n, ) pp,.f ;.,! rins in timo oi pf t. that blight nani'! that i"rs be t)imm''d hj e -) fne, but a.i ti""' r1' i 1.1 i:!i!(-r u J ! Voir h: vT 'A t nil 63

Terras ; of 'MtcrtLii: A tlMlt NEWSPAPER, . , . KNOX COtfNXY." ! poe(Oi10llre(Olnrllot..j.. ....... H ( Oa. Minis 9 months f On. .qnar. 1 yiear,...... Two'uinare. 1 mob thw,. . .. t b0' ... u o i..'W ... ae os :., j v ... so vo ... so oo IJ SO' 90 1 $250 PES YEAK-IV ADVASCE. WM. T, J3ASCOM, ' orsiiToa, riinigii aid atiroa, ' " "'" ' ' v OFFICS IK KREMLIN BLOCK, Su BTont. . ' Two afuare. 1 rear,.. . , H Colnnn Smontha, if Column 1 year, ,1 ii Coltuaa9nioiAh,.MM..a.... Cffldran 1 yo.r,. . . 1 Column t month.,... ... 1 noidrdnifir,j..A.i..'.j..4. devoted to Politics, LiTEitATUitic, the mahkets and arzisiiziiA.r intkiioence 1 fi Da.fnewCard., notc.eMlitg Unel per ye.r',.'. t Notice, la local ootnmn, 4 lln.i abd leas 60 oes's, ovif . a tva line., ten eenUpwllne, Admlnlstrktl.n, m.d, ittachieht,,Sltnrc., and Iran ,'lant alvertliinnta muat b paid ror before lnaovtln. JOB'tWOHK: " . All kinds don promptly, In .opevlor .lyLitp be paid tor on dell very. MOttf T yEHNON, OHIO, TUESDAY, AUGUST 1, 1865. NO o9. H i VciHon 'Kepulttcan: t ... V 1 - , . - ,. , irl.i " '! : ''vi v-'-l 1 !' ' -' 8. K. ft NB. l-HANOK OF TIM?. ,. ' fa. Winter arrangement on iht 8. at K. B B. lu keen Ixed, and tha time, for leaving Mt. Vernon an M followi: r nun soma iooth. If.lt Wat. Mr.-;."...,.,..........J:H . . locoranuvlulo taa...4...i..... 4:M r. M. Xipreu Ieare.'.-;;.;1...... ...... ToaS r. M. , , taaittMtMiw,: . Malt loawa-.-ii l......l:40 r, . Aecommndatioa leVfSs..... ..........7:41 A It. fexpre.. leave.,.. 71i a at. r?!' On the Central Ohm Road leave Newark aa follow.: Going hait, :40 A.M. .'UTrf,Hft.mM,MMi...AtV.IM h N, " , ..'.,.JT.!,.....i..i...4 t:H 1. K. , On the P.XJ. 0. road going Ea.t, the can leav. " Newark,. :40 a. . t, ...... ........... ll:no M. tJologWeat, being oij tlie Central Road, thejr loava aa above. CHUKCH DIBECTOET.Ql: 6ISCTPLES CHURCH, Vine Street, between Osy and MeKan.ie, Service, every Sabhath at iaX o'clock A. M.endlK o'clock P. K. 8abbalh School t0 o'clock A. M. r..,-... . . BLlk R. MQFrETT. . EVANGELICAL' 'LUTHERAN CHt'Ron. ' Fandosky Street. Rev. J. F. SHEARER. Fastol. FRESBYTERrAN CIIURCfl, corner Gay and Che.t-natitraeta : ReT. HERVEy. METHODIST EPIsqOPAL CHURCJT, comer Gay and Cheetnat itreeta. ReT. E. H. BUSH. "PROTESTANT EPISCOPAL CHURCH, comer Gay and Hlgh.treets, . Rer GEO. B. REESE CATROLIO CHCRCn, corner High and MeKen.le, , .. . ; Rer. JULIUS BRENT. METHODIST PROTESTANT CnURCII, ' Mechanic atront between Vina and nigh. "BAPTIST CnrrRCH, Vina etreet, between Mulberry and Uechirnlea. Rer. J. W, ICENRARGER. CONHRECATTONAL CnrRCIL? Molherrynt.. between 8ugaya.nd, PtolranH r Rot. T. 8. MQNROB. UNITED PRESBYTERIAN, corner Main and Rnnr treetal ,, '; ; fa i ,JleT. 8. Jt. HUTCHI80N. . METHnrfrt1 ilrESLEY'Alf 'CHUHCn, corner Vul. berrf id Wooster. , ' ReT. MR. TRAVIS. ' i i : , - "... k mm BUSINESS CAES). 'qb, POTWIH', . WHoCs; ALE, AND RETAIL GROCER,- ' . itty8,Cash for - BUTTEll, t,G6S, 'RAGS, 0 ATS, ETC. :v n-iTitg ,r ,y t h aj -.i f 'iVholeulaand Rotill Dealeraln - BdOTS & SHOES, LAfm, OSii A.tD FIjois ' ,.M ,-,:), . j- 'j.;:?,v.:; ' ) . .f.. " Si' Xu" TATTLOB 55 CO. tea- ,M .,r.Vm'- , , -;. Dry;poods;andJ(6lions, .tV! ir. S PAY-CASH. FpR ' , ... . ', , SUTTER, EGGS, RAGS, AC.-. " ;;'-. .-.v. j . . . ; if U' : "'" v,.., J: ATTORNEY 1 , V wJA'i? COUNSELLOR JIT IJIW. PLAIN AND ORNAMENTAL i. PAINTING, GRAINING t ' AND PAPER BANGING. .' ; , '? Miss Ml AT PONlfELLY, " 7 "";j;'r MILLINER ; :' 1--'AND Ja:A.3SrTAXT3Wi:AKEIl,' Mk Vamon, March M, UM-lr. .-Mi..:. : -tw ' IV ' I' ' ' . : ' " i . ' i CEO. W. MORGAN, ; Attoroyuij;ILin.w-: . OFFICE Orer aha Shoe Store of Mlllor k White, MOUNT YERNjOtCoHIO , Mareh HHi, 186J-lr -' ' j. - "V f.MAIlCn Dtlv 18C4. . ; ' . WARNER MILLER, - 13 RECEIVING FRESH . ' "- NEW GOODS Pd'chmd a'nse the Great Decline In Pricei. All thatwanl Soodl, call at ' ' March W, ISM.. .., '.. ,.. WARNER MILLER'S. Mrs. IJarris & Johnsoiij On Watt Gmliier SI near 2d H ard &hoU Building. ARVI prepared to do W ork In the moat approved atjle, either in Straw, Silk, or Cr.e. They keep a good aaaortmcnt of Ribboni and other Trimlpg. Mar 1,1804. '. .' ' L. R. BROWN, XT Ilomoeopatliio . Tly iclan, OFFICE- Woooward Balldlngi Main Street, , Marin, 186-lr, MT. VERNON, O. t AMERICAN HOUSE, .. ROSS IIANLIN & CO.. Proprietors. a. nosa unn, IT, I SEWAKK, OHIO. , ' ; ',' tJunM,lSS-lyl s. L. OARDHRH j, a. mui. . JUST .RECEIVED AT " . CLOTHING STORE ! - ; 'v ',, ,A 8plendld auortment of ,.. ;;. READHIADE CLOTIIKC! AND Qwrs FunNisnwG GOODS pl,HM rl!,nd I will tU Ua.4 laMJUtf.. ..T-. v.i . TO U low U DOrKthl. . . ,f. Ktixr MUN'K flUB SI'ECIFIC rll.I. will ffl-.-rt a riMM-Mur cure of X ear cane of Srminal l'raAritcrf ur. Jnrolwttaiy Mlktty or Daily ton bnweTer caused, or howernr aerer.; whl'e tbe will epeedllr correct tbone MORHID OMDinntffl ari.ing from tba original. llae or from BecrptViee - THE SPECIFIC PILL I" eqnellr foiled to the treat, rnentnf ererf .ecicof Grmttai or Crinary irritability, "Umu," f -Bririrdust," depoeila In the Urine, "IfVAa'' H'rhnrrp end HcffAr th AiWujr.. PR'iKK'-llONAl. OPlNrON".-1'! here n..d jrmr Sraoirm Pii,l In itianr cae "I fiptrmatorrhm aith the nr.t perfc-4 lucc'Jl, '' V. Miltok BAJiDisa, M. D., L. ID. 7 ' 'f hfre r'ir.l rTy trrrrt cos: with from pit to tea nWn nf rnr rvine Pitt. '-R. K:itK. M. D. V i-r fl ii r I 1. mt b'j fir f V t ' mail. A'MraM f. Vt.s-ct ,i. So.M John St, ff. T. , - 1- , lees. ' . i PESXSILVANU CENTRAL' It. lt. . i ; ' . DOUBLE TRACK HOTJTC rao PITTSBURGH - TO PniLADELPDIA ' From oil porllona of tlio Vcgt, North ' We.t and South-WeBt, thia line and it. connection, form either the ahorteetor the beet route to Philadel. ?hia. Now York, Bo.too, Baltimore and Wuhlngtoa. h. traveller may with conrideuce relr npon euro ceia-neotion. high .peed with perfect aafety, feud every fep pltance for comfort that ctin bo procured. New and elegant paaeenger care, for day and night if rvice, have recently been added to the equipment of the Penn.yl rani Central Rail Road. At Plttebnrgh, train, from th. Went run direct to th. Union Depot, whrre paeaengora am tmiitferred to tba 'Tr.ioa of the Peon.rlvania Central Railway, which leawe PitUbargh and arrive atotber point, a. follower DAT l XPKKiS-ln Plttiburgh at 3.60 A. M.. .topping at Prinrlnal Ulatlon.. Arrive! at AHoona t.fto A M., Tyrone M A. M. (Belleninta 10.32 A. M LotkHavnn IU.iM) P. M.,) Harrlaburgt at 1.10 P;M, Baltimore at 6.4 P. M., New York, via Allenlown, at 10 SO P, M.,.PWUdolphlaJ att 44 P, M., and New York, via Philadelphia, at 10.87 P. 11.. -IvIAIIi LINE. Leava. Plttunnr at t DO A, M., etfipp.Bg at all reirolar Station.. Altoonaf atlldoA. M., HarriubnrgtO OO P. M., arririnir at Philadelphia at 11.20 P.M., and New York, via Philadelphia, at t.O A.M.'. . j 1 :' i ' j .) , i . . . -, . PITTsnCItCH ANO F.MIS MAIL. Leave. Pitteburgh at 1,30 P. M. Stopping at nearly all Station. Arrive at Altnonat at 7. 'JO p. M , llarria-burg 1.25 A. M., and Philadelphia at 40 A. M. PHILADELPHIA E X P H E 8 Sf Leave. Pltt.burgh at 4.26 P. M. etopping only at Principal Sta. tlona. Arrive, at Latrobet 6.10 P. M., Altnona at U P. M , Harriaburgat 2 80 A. M. Ballimorr T.OO A M , New York, via Allentown, 10.00 A. M., Phllvtelphll at 7.06 A. H., and New Yorkf via Philadelphia, 12 00 M. JSltepiug - Can run thronph on tbia tmln from Pittaburgh to Baltimore and.Ptiiladelphia, and to New York via AlUntown. FAST LINE Leave. Plttabargb at t.30 P. M. Stopping only at principal Station. Arrive, at AHoona at 2 30 A. M.. Harriiburg at 7.30 A. M.fi.lllmnrct at 12 20 P. M Ne V Vork.t via Allentown, at 2.46 P. M., Philade'.phiat, 12 40 P. II and New Yorkt via Philadel-phla..at 6.42 P. M. freakfoLtl. . t Di'imer. . . t Svppet. , . f Daily, all other rraini Sundajt excepted. TICKETS FOR SALE TO BOSTON BY BOAT OR RAIL. .oat TirKSTS onon nir akt nP tiix bound ' Liataa. ' ' FAEE'IO AIL POIUTSAS LOW AS ANY R0CTB. SLEEPING'CARS': ... 0.1 KiaHT TRAIXH TO PH'IAD'A NEW YORK & BALTIMORE. o BAGGAGE CHECKED THROUGH AND TRANSFERRED FREE. THE PENNSYLVANIA RAIL ROAD CO. Will ootMfiome Rnj risk for BaRi!, vvct?pt for Wowing A ii parol, and I'mit their reniMmsibllity to One Hut dretj bullan la Taluc. All Bag(rTjt exceediDjf that Amnunt in value, will be at the rlik or the vwner, unlraa taken by upecial contract. FREIGHT. By thl. Rente Freight, of afl de.erlption can he (forwarded to and from Philadelphia, New York, Bostnb. or Baltimore, to and from, any point on the Railroad, of Ohio, Kentucky, Indiana, Illinoia, Wisconsin, Iowa or Miaaouri, bf Hailroad direct- The Pennaylvania Central Rail Read alao connect, at Pittaburgh with Steamera, by which Good, can be fn. warded to any acceaaible port on the Ohio, Mirakinguni, Tenneaae, t'nmlierland, Illinole, Miaaiaaippl, Mlaaourt, Arkanaa.and Red Rivera; and at Cleveland, Sandnaky and Chicago with Steamer, to all Porta an the North-Weatem Lake.. Merchant, and ahlpper. entrusting the tranapnrtatlnn of their Freight to thiaConiuany, can rely with contl-dence on ita apee'lv tranait. , THE RAIEj Or PRKlGUTtoand from any point In the West, by the Pennaylvania Central Rail Rnkdire at all time ai JaxaralM ai an charged tiy other Hail Mood Vomjianict. ...... , f jpr Be particular to mark g ckagea '-tia Pikx'a Ckitual R. K. For KtelghUContrart. or Shipping Direction., apply to or addreea either of the following. Agent, of the Coin- l"i'J 8. H. KINGSTON. Jr., FrelKht Agent. Philada, 3. A CAKl'ENTKR, Freight Agent, Pittaburgh . CLARKE ft CO , Tritnafer Agent, Pittaburgh. , - H W. BKOWNI CO , Cincinnati, Ohio. R. C. MKMIKUM fcCO., Madlaon, Indiana. 1IOKF.HKAD & CO., Lnuiaville, Keutucky. W. M AIRMAN. Evnnav lie, (nd.-It. r. MAMS CO. St. I.oula. Miaaouri : - CLARKE A CO., Chicago, Illinoia. J. II. McCDl.M. rnrteinnuth, O. J M. LOVE, Mnvaville, Ky. HALL ft C(t, Marietta. O. ' R AYI1KS. Mnnkingum River. O. W.H E. L I.AN01.EY, Galllpoll., 0. U.S. PIERCE k CO., .aneavillo, O. N H. HUDSON. Ripely, O. E D. MKLDRCM, General Travelling Agent. . LlVEST0CK. . DroTfrnAntl Farmera wllV-flnd thhi a mnut ndrant. gttona ronte for Lire Stock, Cpacions Yarda, veil wate.ed and unpplfed with eyerr conTenlenc, hare been opened no thin line and it connection, end ever attftutlon In paid to the(r wants. Fruin Hnrriburj(, where will be fimnd every eonvplrnce for fepdinff (tnd rcufinjp, a choice in offered of PHILADELPHIA, NEW YORK aad B, MIMOUR MARKETS. Thin will a We f'ttind the nlmrtent, qnfckent and mont direct Toute for Stork to New York lia Allentown and witl fewer chanffPfi thn nt othtr. EN07H LEWIS. flen'l Superintendent, AHoona, Pa HENRY W. OWINFER. 0en'l Ticket ARent. Phlla H. II- HOUSTON, Oen'l Freight Agent, Phila. - . June 20-6ft. A' pamphlet directing how to peedllr rxstorb pioiit and Kve up jpactaclen without ail or Doctor or medicine, wot bv mail free on receipt of 10 cent". ! Adilmi .:. H, B. FooTa, M. P., ft Deo, iiO, lHtU-ly. 1130 Broadway, N. Y. MOUNT VERNON UNIQORASSBAND. rpHlSANo' lllnowWrrrinptetely urganiMd,' and la X good healthy i-Aqdiliorii It. harfaeholce .election ol Mnatc and nA'li-i coipete.nt4n.troctlnn has arrived at prolrklency 111 iitniMliwI 'eiecntinn. It I. ready to fill all call. f(i piuairal aervlceiKrat home or abroad, on reaaonab1elotm,filtfi'erTt Cotillion Partie. or for Bra. Mu.le.' ' " W: M: TiiOMPdON, Pre.'t. S. 0. Rjw.. ,Mdi. - (Dee. la.lWtf. Howard rAssociation.' 'VipHILADKLTHlA.-'PA.::!!: v' Dlaeaaea oftte NCrrous, Seminal, Urinary and Boxual Systema new and reliable treat ment in ReporU rf the HOWARD A8S0DIATION Sent by mail in sealed letter envelnpee. free of charge,' Addre.., Dr. J. 8K1LI.EN HOUGHTON, How.rd Aaao-al.tlon, No. X South Ninth Street, Philadelphia, Pa.-Doe. ih, lDM-lr. ; . . , . , KENYON HOUSE, j- Corner of Malufit, and the Pnbllc Pqotre, I ' ' " .-".: - MOUNT VERtfON. 0. ' nAVINOLeawd lhl w.fl known and popular Hotel, and Atted it up in superior style, t am prepared to accommodate travelera aod all other, who may giv. m. a call. The Datronag. of the Public I. rewertfulty o- lidted, ' : JOSEPH SOARBROUGH, MajJ,I865-ly. ; 1 ' . ' . , LECTURE nil Pultithed M A Sralsd Envtinpe. ' Price SU CbtUr- A Lecture on the Natiire, Treatment and Ratllc&l Care of Spermatorrtioea or Seminal Weak-cm, Itivolurrtary Emisnionn, Pesual DeblUly, and Im-Bedionenta ta Mairiafr jreeerftlly.. NervoONneM, Cnn-umplion, Kpilepney, and fiia; MeoUl ad Phyical In-tanaritr. reilnnii from 8elf Almxe. Hr ROBT J CULNKRWCLL, V. D., Anthorof the"flreeo Book," e. - ' i - . ... The World renowned anthor, In tbia admlrwMe Lee' .tare clearly provea from bii own experience that tba awful eooeeqneneM of 8 If-A bote may be effectually removed wHhoat medlclae, and-wttbentdnreroaaiar Jical uperatfone, houRif. Innlmmentfl,' ring, reor-laid, pofnUnf out a mode of eara at once certain and ffectual. br wlileh every uil'erer. n wjattefwbat bU eowdiUoa may be, may cure hiinelf cheaply, privately and radirallr. THIH LKC1UMK Wil l. PKOVJt A BOONTOTHOtSANDfl AND THOC3AN03. Sent under net: to anr addren. ia a plain, tealed en velope, on the receipt of ail cents, or two postage BUmp, bv Hlrting CHAS. J. 0, KLIN I ft Ca , ' 137 Bowory, Jf. Poat-Office Box 45804. June 80, lM.V7vo. IBOLTIWG ; THE BEST IJiror.TED. ! .. ' , Fox Salt by .... " . . Nor.'21, V t ly. , , TllE bt.b CANOE, W her. t)i. rnck. are gray, and ItleJ shore Ja staep, , , . And the waters beloW look dark and deep. Where the rugged pine, in its lonely pride, ; Leans gloomily over the niUrky tide ; ' Whera the reds and ruahe. are long and, .rank, And the weed, grow thick on the windiuH4ank ; Where the ahiulnw ia heavy (he Whole day through, Lie. at It. moorlhg. the old canon. . !;; : . ,'1 .-r. .- ::T '. The uii'leat paddles are Idly dropped, ',' if Like a sea-bird'a winga that the atorni ha. lorrped,' "And crowed on the raillhg, on. o'.r on., ' Like the folded bond, when tb. work i. don. Vt bile bually beck .nd forth between, ; ., , . : . , The aplder stretcite. hia silvery arn-eo, ' And th. solemn owl, with hi. dull "loo-boo," - .-Settle, down ou th. .id. of th. old canon. ,,, .. i ' . . -) ., ,.- Tim alern half sunk In the slimy ware; ' ' ' Hot. .lowly away In It. living grave, -mi ' i:: And th. gr.en moa. oreep. o'er 1U dull d.cy. r Illdingll.nioiiMrrliigduat.wsy,., ' . Like the hand that plant, e'er thedowih a Bower, ' ' ! Orthelvy ihtn mantle, th. f.llen towrr j . -., Wjiile hiutiy a hlnaaom of lovelleat hue, 1 it , Springs up o'er the .'ern of the old canoe,- ' 1 . ' t .' .. :, '. :. . , '., ,!, -. The cblTPhllrsii waves are dead and tl1l - ' i'i 1 But the light wind plays with the boat at will, - And Imily in aud out again i f , It Boats the length of the rusty chain, 1 ' 1 '' ' Like tho wear march of the b.ml. ol timei i : " That meet and part at the noootlde chime. And the shore l. kissed at erh turn au.w ' : ; i ' ' i By th. drippinjbow of the 014 c.oe, ,! . j , , y 0, many a tlm, fltfa t e.rela heni), i' j ; I have puahed It away from the pebbly slrtthdj And paddled It down where the stream mm qulck Wbere the wbirla are wild nd th, eddlea are thick-' And Isughed as I leaned o'er the rocking e iOe, And Im.ked below in th. hrokl n tide, To aeo that the facos and boats were twn ;. c .-i. That were mirrored back from the old oanoa. . . Buloow,asIlesnji'erthecrnniMI'iirldei 1 . - ' ' And look below in th. elngsrlah tide, I ' r Ttie far. that I we there is graver grown, ; ,, And Hie laugh that I hear has a soberer tone, And the h.nilsthat lent to the light akilf wings, ' 1 Have grown familiar with Sterner tiling, , , . , ' But I love to think n(tbe hour, that flew , A. I rocked where the whirls their w'llto .pray threw, Era the bio. mm w.ved,r tb. green tfrasa grew. O'er the mouldeiing .tern of the old canoe. j How be Came to be Married- It may be funny, but l'v done it I've got a wife and a baby. Shadows departed oyster sttws, brandy cock-tails,' cigar boxes, bootiacks. abscoiidine shirt buttons, wbiet and demijobri. Shadows present hoop skirts, bund boxes, ribbons, garters, Iodr stockings, juvenile dresses, tin trumpets, little willow j eliair?, cradles, Dius, paps, sugar teats, pare-soric, hive syrup, rhubarb, senna, salts, (quills, nd doctor bills Shallows'- iuturs more pound babies, more Live syrup, etc., etc. I'll just tell you bow I got caught .. 1 was always the darndest rnost lea cusiara oiisniui it'iiow you ever did seo ; it was kinder in my line to be taken with the shakes every time I saw a gal approaching me, and I'd cross the street ,1. ,1 r.. . ,na. Ka. any lllliu ruiuwr uiuu iui-o nun , iw.oui u- caus I didn't lik the critters, for I was be-1 hind the fence looking at them tlirough a knot hole. .1 couldn't look, at one long enough. Well, my sister Lib gave a party oDe night and I stayed away from homo because I was too bashful to face the music. I bung around the house whistling "Old Dnn Tucker," dancing to keep my feet warm, wufbhing the heads bobbing jop nod down behind the window curtf ins, and wishing the thundering party "Would break up, so I could get to my room. 1 smoked up a uuncu ot cigars, nna as ic was gettiug late and mighty uncomfortable, I concluded to shin up the door post No sooner .aid than done, and I soon found myself song in bed. " , 'Now,' says I, 'let her rip I Dance till your wind gives ouL" And coddling under the quilts, Morphens grabbed me. I, was dreaming of soft shell crabs and slewed tripe, and having a good time, when somebody knocked at the door and woke me up. 'Bap' again, - I laid low. 'Rap, rap, rnp I' Then Ihcard a whispering, and I knew there was a whole raft of guls outside. 'Bap, rap 1' Then Lib sings out : ' '. 'Jack, are you there ?' Yes,' says I. Then came a roar of laughter. , 'Let us in,' said she, ; ' 'I won't' 8"id I, 'can't yon, let ft fellow alone V : ; .. ... - 'Are you a-bed ?' says Bhe. 'I em,' says I, Oct out,' says she. 'I won't says L !' " Then came another langb. By thunder I . I begau to get riled. ; 'Get ont, you potticouted scarecrows 1 ' cried I ; 'can't yon get a bean without hauling a fellow out of bed t "I won't go home with you I won't so you may clear out !' And throwing a boot at the door, I felt better. But presently oh 1 mortal buttons 1 I beard a still, small voice, very much like sister Lib's, and it Baid : ' 'Jack, you'll have to get up, for all the girls' things are there.'. ' . . Oh. Lord, what a pickle 1 Think of me in bed, all covered with shawls, muffs, bonnets and cloaks, and twenty girls outside the door waiting to get in I If I had stopped to think I should have pancaked on the spot As it was I rolled ont among the bonnet ware and ribbons in a harry. Smash went the millinery in every direction. 1 1 l ad to dress in the dark for there was a crack in the door, and the girls will peep andv the way I fumbled about Was death on straw hats. " I opened the door and found myself -right among the women..i.' -si.- '.i , i ; i. ) .'.,.' ; ;'Ob, my Leglorn I cried, one. 'My. dear, darling wintefVelvet P. cried another, and they pitched in they pulled me this way and that, boxed my ears, and one bright-eyed little piece Sal, her name w. as put ber arms right round my neck, and kissed me right on my lips.'1 Human nature donldn't stand that and I gave her as good as she sent. ..It was. the first time I ever got the taste, aud it . was powerful good. I believe I could have kissed that gal from JnliuS Cesar to the Fourth of July; TJ-I" "-'- I .i..'.!-!-"' f. Ill .' 1. T.I. I- Vack,' said she, i.'we are. sorry to disturb you, but won't yoo see me home V ,. ; --"Ves,' saili I, 'I will.'.' ' '." " i"". ; , I did do It and bad another smack ai the gate, too. After that we took A kinder turtle dove after each other, both of ns sighing like barrel of new cider. when we were awsy from each other,' Twos at tbe close of a glorious summer day tba iuu was setting-, be hind distaut ben-roost w truu-lrogs were commencing their evening songs, and polly-wogs, la their native mud puddles, were preparing themnetves for the shades of night and Hal and myself sat on an antiquated black log, listening to the-music of nature, such ftn-tree toads, roosters and granting pigs, and how nd then the music of a jackass was wafted to our ears' by the) gentla sephyrs' that sighed araong the niullen stocks, and came heavy laden with the delicious odors .of ben-roosla and pig styes. The Inst lingering fays of the gettiug son glnuciug from tlia buttons of . a golltaiy horsomnn, shone through a knot bul in a hog peri full in Sal's fdee, dyeing her hair anoruDge peel line, una lUfowinp on my Iliread bare cdut to a bad advantage ; one cf my arms was around Sal's waist, my band resting On the email of her back, she was toying witli my auburn locs of jet black. bn : she was almost gone, "and I' was' ditto.' She laotti like a grasshopper dying with the hicenp., and I felt like a mud-turtle cbohoa wlln codfish bull, . i '8al,' says I, In a voice as musical as the notes of a dying swan! 'will you have me V ! - She turned hor eyes heavenward, clasped me by the hand, bad an attack of the heaves and bliud staggers, with a sigh that drew ber shoestrings to ber palate, said : .;; 'YeSl', . .... ' ,', . .' ( " Bhe gave clear out' 'hen, and squatted io my rnp. ,1 hugged her till l broke mysus pendufs, and bur preatb smeilutl.or ouions she had eaten two weeks before. ',' Well, to niuke a long story short she sat the day, and we practiced for four weeks every nigh, how we woflld entpf the room tp'be marriod, till we got so wo corjH walk as g'rnca-flilasacc'uple'ofMOscoyy duths. Thonight the company and the minister came, thesiguul was given, and arm iu arm we marched through the crowded halt We were just eu'ering the fjarlor door, when dowa I went kerslap on the oilcloth,' pulling Stil after me. . Some cussed fellow had dropped a biinana skin on the floor and it Hoofed me. It split an awful hole la my carsimersi right under my dress coat tail. 'At was too late to back out ; so - clasping my hand over it we marched in and were spliced and taking a seat I watched the kissing-the; bride operation.' .My groomsman was tight and he kissed her till 1 inmped up to tako a slice, when, oh, horror! a little six-year old Imp had crawled behind me and polled my shirt through the bole in my pants, had pinned it to the cbttir, end jumping np I displayed to the admiring gnKe of tba astonished multitude a trifle more white mnslin than was pleasant The women giggled, the men roared, and I got mad, but was finally put to bed and there my troubles ull esded. 4Jood Bight ; ' A Visit to Baron Yon Llebls. the , Great Agricultural Chemist- .' Mains; (Mayence) June 17, 1805. ' Nelson 3. Turnev, Esq, ' r -' 1 '' " ' ' I'reiiddit Ohio Slate Boari Jlgriculluret , Dear Sir : On Wednesday last I left the old city of Stuttgard foe, itunchen, (Munich) by way of Ulm on the Daimho,and Augsburg, the old ciry where the Lutheran Confession of Faith was concerted. I went to Muncherrl on purpose to see Baron -Von Liebig,' the great Agricultural Chemist of the world. He wrote the first book on Agricultural Chemistry, and has written the trest books wo have on the subject. He received me not only cordially and kindly, but very warmly, and gave me really the warmest welcome aud reception I received inJurope. He commenced at once on the subject of agriculture in Ohio; said ho had read all my reports with great interest and had expected to find me a much older man. After spending half an hour in conversation not necessary to be repeated here, 1 mentioned to him. the purpose of my visit ; told him we were about to found an Agricultural College, told bim of the prospective fund, etc, etc.: lie told me that he would be very bappy te give me bis views upon the subject, but wished me. to understand every point clearly, and not misrepresent or misunderstand him, as so many bad already done. The snm and ttibstance was this, aod he gave his reason for such conclusion i , , t . . , , THE BARON'S VIEWS .ON TUB ESTABLISHMENT OP ; THR OHIO AGRICULTURAL SCHOOL DANQRRS , TO BE AVOIDED. V " '. ; ''In Ohio yon do not want to bui'd tpaluce fur an Agricultural School. In America you spend too much money in putting up your eduoational buildings, and then starve your professors. I learn (he said) that yoq put up a very grand building in yur city of Columbus called the Starlin(fMedieal College ; I have a picture- of it I am told itcost some 870,000 or $73,000, and now you are starv iog the professors in if Toil did tho same in Cleveland, and in Cincinnati. .' Then I am told you bnilt (mo Universities in Ohio, and note the professors can barely live on the salary you pay. , The consequence is, that these Schools, Colleges or Universities mutt run down. There is no place in the whole world whore knowledge can make so much money as in America ; therefore, your best men will not become teachers 0' professors, simply because they can make moro money out of something else ; and they naturally apply their talent and ability wbere it pays the best. No man will engage in an educational course of life for lift on a salary of $1,200 or$l,500 a year, wheu ho, by applying the same ability in some other pursuit can make $4,000 to $5,000 a year.' Hence, yon have no firtt clan profettori in all America but you have Mislead first class business men, first class mechanics, and managers of large and colossal establishments.' Now, I am afraid that out of your large fund of money yoo wjll think that yon must at least bnild another ''Starling College,' or even a yet more expensive establishment You want an ordinary good building, but yon don't want the twentieth part there is at -Hohenhetm. ' Then, too, I am afraid that after yon have your buildings yon will employ thjrd or fourth rate professors, and yon will find that yoar establishment will languish ( aDd your standard of attainments' jvill be very, low. . These are your great dangers. - Ou the othor baud, with an ordinary and convenient building.jSVsf rale profettori and well paid, you may rest- assured that Ohio will take high raoL in the agricultural WHO SHOULD BE MANAGERS OF SUCH A!f IK8TI-; I TDTIOM. . ,,. ,. : ! "The manager or .director of the establishment should be a man thoroughly versed in scientific agriculture ; because the experimental farm, is for the purpose of making experi ments purely, ' and dot for the purpose Of maintaining or supporting ,tae ocnooi. j no scientific director can see that the proper experiments are-made ; and these experiments shonld always be made in direct consideration of being put into general practice ; that is, they should all tend to producing the gnateit crops at' the least expense, and without ex-haustiflj! tht toil, and of courso be of inch a character that all the farmers may availthem-selves of' the methods - because,' if your experiments cost more than the' crops amount to, nobody will repeat tbem, and yon have made no advance in agriculture, although you may have solved a problem, or ascertained a fact r vet for agriculture generally, it it of nd value. If, on the other land, yoar director is a practical man only, and not a scientific man, he is only repeating on the experimental farm : what bt -perhaps- being. done on- every well-regulated farm in the. State; and thereof you are making no progress.. Yon can never persuade a practical director to make proper scientific experiments." ' - -J ' : -- SCtRNCK AND KXrgRIMRNT THS BARONOB-" ' ; '.- I ftCtt TO A "MODEL .FARM."' ., , Ul'V t 'At thia poini Prof.' Liobig"gave me a detailed aceonnr of the -'Conflict between the prartjnol director at Uohenleim and the scientific professor?. These profeasors claimed , that thrt director was using up the capital of the institution, and wax not living tin the in-tome a the director maintained the past ten J Joart demonstrated that the prol''sorn wnrs right although they were unable to have their doctrines pnt Into practice. . "You don't want much land,"- coutinned Liebig ; "a few hun dred acres Is all sufficient for all manner of experiments and you must allow me to re peat you want to tnafe.9. erpertmehtt only. You, don't want to teach a specific system of model farming for many reasons firstly, not one student perhaps, cad get a larm precisely liko your irodel furm ; he may hot be able to get so much grass land, or so much nplnud, or may be unable to have firm buildings precisely like '.'the model Ciies. Then, what good does your model do when nooooy cun copy it f And to co y a pari of the model impretsti the ignorant that lue wuoie is cop led, and the results in copying a part cauuot be as great pr as bcneflciul materially as . if the whole were copied ; and yet the moral effect is, that that pari represents the whole. Therefore, I would uot advise model farming. Uohenheim sot out with the ide of being a model furm when there were not half a doaen estates of the same extent or reotogical struo- tare in all Wnrtemburg : and, as a mattof or .. .. V course, it must fail as a model, for nobody but kings and princes could copy it bmall farmers could not even attempt it Confine yonr institution to experiments, and as for practice you have every day at your service the prac tice of the whole fotate of Uhio. Let the stu dents visit the best farms Jn the State, and see how things aro managed, and it will do them more good than if you undertake to carry ont the 'model idea.' .Now, when you get hose, pray do not misrepresent this idea. I want you to make experiments ; not simply to show what can be done, but make experiments to show what can be done profitably. and what may be done by any intelligent farmer. Of course you cannot expect to accomplish much for the present generation of farmers, but the seeds you bow will be reaped by the coaiiug and future generations," tub faults or tur okrmah schools. : I asked bim if( In bis opinion, the schools at llohenbeimj Eldeua, and Tharand, and Others I bad visited, bad accomplished any good for agriculture f He instantly replied. "A'o tbey have impeded ruther .than pro gresced it ' But they have shown us how much learning can be used to do purpose. I nave been fighting these schools lor the past 25 years, aud it is from them that the greatest opposition to me comes. Yo must visit Saxony for rational and successful agriculture.' I told him that I had been there. We then discussed at ' some length the schools there, iu detail : Fommrita, Tharand, Blag-witz. Halle. Dr. Kuebn, Gruven, &c I have jotted down these views, lest I forget them, or get them mixed np witn tne ideas ol some other men. . : : : . i ; . : -. ; v EXPERIMENTAL AGRICULTURAL STATIONS . 7 v! PRACTICAL CUKIIISTBV. , . j I did forget to mention in the proper place, that Liebig .said we must by all means have experimental Agricultural Stations throughout the .State j if we caonot afford one ia every county, then Lave on in every Dine or ten counties at first eud let them be gradually increased. , And if your ten or twelve colleges want to do any agricultural work,, and get a name aud reputation lor actual agricultural ability, let the colleges take hold of these ex perimental stations. You say that all of these colleges pretond to tench chemistry : "of course chemistry caonot be taugnt witnout a chemist ; now just give the experimental sta tion in charge or that chemist, iou aont want anybody else to have charge off A practical man ?'' And -for what f .The practical man will only practice there what he has practiced all his life elsewhere. . In your free country the students can roam over the whole couutry and see much mora of practical agri culture iu one day, thau the practical man can teach in a month . WHAT -AMERICA'S FARMERS NEED THE AGRI CULTURAL 8YSTK11S OF DIFFERENT NATIONS. In a word, your American farmers are the best practical farmers in the world ; but they want science, or scientinc expenmcnis, to guide their practice and make it yield them threefold what it(now does. - Tho agricultural department to a college without an experi mental station, is simply nonsense ; oecause, what can you teach. that half the students do not already know from actual practice on the furm 7 Now you don t want to teach what every practical faimer already knows, because if. that is your object, men me students had better go to a practical farmer where tbey can. get wages and learn me practice at the samo time ; aud tuec uiepense wun an Agricultural College altogether. But vou waut to teach a better system of farming ; yon want to make the crops in Ohio as productive as those of Saxony. Hew will you do it-7 Certainly not by getting a practical farmer to manage a model farm lor you, ror ne knows only whut is practiced generally ; and his superior ability will consist simply in his better manage' ment over other ordinary farmers. This will be teaching financiering, And not agriculture. The only wsy you possibly can advance and dsvelop your agriculture is by experiments tpat is the. only plan. : Saxony has no secrets in her farming. Every operation is cpen to iosptction, and doue in broad day light ; but Saxony learned it only by experience. Prns-iu sent students to Tharandriiud tbey graduated and weLt to work on their estates in Prut-sia; but Saxon experience was good for oothine there." Saxony differs widely from Prussia in. climate, soil, and contour; in geological formation and everything hclonging to agriculture." Prussia then commenced her experimental schools, and now is learning rapidly; h.er agriculture is greatly improved, i You must, in 'course of time, have experimental stations in eyery county; you probablycannot anqro, mem fiou, out e yoar. population, increases; yoo will find that you will be com pelled to have them, Or else abandon your idea of being a grain and beef exporting State. There is no branch of industry ao completely bnilt up of experiment agricultnrt. Therefore, no teacher tm anybody else, can go from Germany to Ohio and grow sixty bushels of wheat to the acre lh first year. He may do it the tc'.ond, but he must have one whole year ol experience ana ooscrvauoa witu itie toil and climate before be can improve) much on yonr. -present products. So far! M cattle breeding ia couceined,.-jill of that Can be taught aod tbe experiments made at the col lege . proper, , and that will answyf for the eDtire State, and perhaps for all the northern States. And then, too, you do tot need a hundred head' of "Schwyts cattle, or tixty of Liimmertnaier, or mnery Hollanders, or forty Uldenbnrgers as iJonenheim has, and has had in funmcc timer. Aod for borse breeding you do not require royal . ttud of hundreds of thorough bred Arabians ; neither do you need shoep by the thousand to demonstrate sheep breeding and wool grow ng. A lew of each kind of cattle, horses and sheep are amp ly (sufficient " You most not Calculate in ai y sffise to derive an Income from the products of, .the experimental faim : because while Some experiments may produce considerable gain, others will Cause loss ; of conr) nobodv knows In Rdvacce which r f any two series of experiment wil.- be paying ones (in money yon should to mute ihca nit ry ; and even then yoq will Pud that oua half of Uiem will caose as much bit at (he other half has caused gain. All you want to teach at the college, are ihe principles of agiiculturo just as you would teach pure mathematics as geometry, trigonometry, and algebra; branches, or rational principles, which are applied in astronomy, navigation, surVeylng.engineer-iiigiu Tact every where, thus purely do yon want to teach these principles, then, on the experimental furm I and on the experimental stations you want io apply these principles, just at you apply geometry and trigonometry when you tcacn practical surveying auu navi gation, lo this and your institution will not oulv succeed but be an honor to your State, and a blessing to future generations.' But if you attempt to copy Hobenheirti,1 or Eldena, or any of that model furm genua, you will fi.il. Now, Mr. I 'resident 1 have endeavored to give you Liebig t views ; and Iu part bis own words translated. Into tfngiun. I was mucn pleased with this interview with this greatest chemist the world has ever produced ; and I do not thiuk it worth while spending time and money in running after the "smaller fry." TBI GREAT- lNTIBNATIONAL FAIR AT COLOONB I commenced this letter at Mayence and am finishing it at Cologne. To-day (June 19,1 1 visitnd the cceat International fair, cn which I' had been appointed a committee; The Fair, in my opinion, is a decided failure, but it will pay, because there is "lots" of beer here, and a Big Lottery counected with the Fair. There were no live stock on exhibition nothing but agricultural implements, and manufactures and wares. I ant glad I was not hero to serve as a juryman. ' ' ' 1 liespectrully, ' I - ! JOHN II." KLIPPART. Rc-construclion from an English liberal point ol views., j ? ,s The London Spectator has an able article on Uie situation in the United State. . It lays we have triumphed In the fight, but It thinks more trying ordeal Is now before us. . The process by which eleven Oligarchical States are to be changed to eleven' Democratic, and free Republict is now the gr?at test of bnr system.. , We copy a row parograhs from tha article, as they contain suggestion! worthy tho copsideration of American Statesmen, ' , In eleven States, all faithful or submissive to the Union Virginia, Kentucky, Tennessee North 'Carolina; Sooth CarOliuia,' Georgia, Alabama, , Mississippi, Florida, Louisiana, and Texas there is a silent struggle going on, nominally as to the position of the negro, really as to the question, old as civilization, whether the basis of society ia to bo equality ot privilege,- Equality : of legal rights it the strength- of the North, yet it is unwilling to ; establish it io the South by force; privilege is the passion of the South, and though de- leaieu iu tuw Krvm. o.ul3b'w tl-0 uu cognition at the keyttona of society, it cannot bear to surrender the long-enjoyed possesion. Privilege, therefore, in some shape tha "Soath" by which we iu this instance mean alt re- . t -t V. I.K .. ut.l.. In flofapmlnorl tn UUUliy VIUVCUUIUIU U1U1VD io uvwiunuv. .v retain.; In Virginia the masters, : with the fine instinct of capital for its immediate interests, have combined to fix the rate of wages for colored men at five dolars a month, just oue third the biriug price of slaves, and about one fourth the rate which the colored men, if free to work or bo idle,, would be willing to accept. - ..,(...--... If the domnlant race is' to decide without intervention, privilege is reestablished, the war with its fearful expenditure of blood and treasure and energy, will have been waged in vain and tbe Union must sooner or later be again assailed by a competing civilization. We do not, therefore, wonder that shrewd Americans, perceiving this, are splitting iuto three camps of opinion, fighting for three different schemes nf ..nlitn Dia aonlinn nmilld nOemit narllOn. would welcome, (be resalt they.perceive ativoa labored, fought and suffered through th . .: baud, but the section Ii small, and to our readers at least not worthy of very careful expos ure, The others are two branches of one great party which is resolved to prevent the rcestablishmcnf of privilege, but being resolv ed, has split upon the policy b which Its rd solve is to be attained. I'he individual state the republicans clearly perceive, must either be coerced into doing the necessary impartial justice, or made to see that it is for inter est to do it must in fact either be placed no der the Federal power, i.. in party phrase, under "military control, or must do induced to establish negro suffrage. Under the former plan, which is, we regret to perceive, slightly gaining ground, being not only much the quicker, bnt supported by the uegroes themselves, external justice would be secured, but at the certain cost of Stale rights, whicn - are of doobtlul value, and the possible risk or freedom, which is simply Invaluabla - -. Under the second scheme justice would do- secured from within, the rulers seeing it not done because they love justice,, but because they must conciliate the men whose rotas can turn the scale ror or against inomseives. Without external pressure applied irt one of these two modes the eleven Statei, at they re vive and recover their internal independence, will reestablish tbe ancient system, modified only by restrictions on the division of families, by a right to bare maintenance in cash instead of in kind, and by a restricted privilege of transfer from one estate to another, -i Those changes are gains to tbe negro, but they leave the grand structure, or privilege untouched, and allow society in the South to reconstruct itself on the1 basis of tho riubt of a dominant caste to rule tbe legally subordinated masses, that Is, oo a scheme which m a lew years must inevitably conflict once more with the scheme on which North American society is and wifi continue based.' i ;-vi-r? .;.:.'! v mr! ii-GoT. Brown of tla on SlaTQrjv - The Savannah Herald contains ao addrest by Ex Gov, Brown to the people of Georgia, in which he urires them to support not only the government or tbe united states, dui me administration of the present Chief Magistrate. He Appeal to tbern to take th amnesty oatu, and observe, itio good faith, .He argues that tlaveiy is now dead forever. At to bis own slave, he will Immediately' emancipate and treat them at free, e-iving them a part or the crop or waget for lbf--To those who can- Dot Wpport the Constitution of tho govern. ment be tuggeatt emigration rom me couuiry. ; the ?few York Times' Washington dcinatch taya effort ire 'making la "North Carolina to promote emigration, to that btrtte on att ex tensive scale.; A general Immigration agency ha been .established at Kaleiith, tnd over 100,000 acres of landman mill sites, tuwu and city lots' arribffered for sale. - ' ' The Fourtblof July was celebrafed in Au gusta, Ua., by a colored procession with b inner", on which "death to disunion and slavery," and "freedom and rqutlity" were jrs-tibed. In the wflifnorO the troi ps paraded, and in the evening thore wa a ilijilny of fireworki i The biilh Unl garrisou Chaik?" e,! : ej H Ccn- logan's Farewell to his Arcij' . .! IliAMoTiiTBiuJA anr or Tennkssk& "l i ;lynu.t,1LuJni '13Ui 1865. jj , Officers and Soldiers of tits Army of Ttnn, :: ;I The profound trratification I M in buing anthoiUMxi to release you from the onerous ob- ; ligation of the camp,, and return you laden ; with laurels, to hornet Where warm heaita wait to welcome you, is tomowhat embittered. ' I by the "Dainfut reflection that lam sundering the tiet that triabj bavnj .rutuletruei Umo mnd. , tecder, auD'eriug'. made tacrod,' perils mud; V proud, heroism made honorable and famrj made forever fearless of the futures ; . It is no common occasion that damaudt the disband-meut of a military orguniratioo, before the resistless ; power, ,-wliich,- fliQuntnius: brfettiny j. T, with bayouuts have bowed cities have surrendered, aod millions of brave men b ?en coli , quered. Although 1 have ' been but far a .-'. short period your commander, we are not strangers, affections have sprung up between; ; ; ;-us during the long years of doubt gloom and carnage, which wfc? have passed through to " gethar, nurtured by common perils, tufioringa 1-" and sai-rifirea and rfvited bv I lie memories of gallant comrades, wkoHfOoues repose beoeatb . the sod of an hundred battle fields, nor time ' nor distance will weaken or efface. The many marches you have made, the dangers you-have d&jpised.the haughtiness you have hum.-! bled, the duties yon have discharged, the glory-you have gained,' the destiny you have discovered for theoountry in whose causeyenbevo ' : conquered, all recur at this moment in all the vividness that marked tho scones through . r, which we have just passed. ' 'From the pent ' oMhe ables historians of the land, daily are drifting out upon the current qf time.pago upon :T page.-volunM. upon voluma -of youboio- deeds, and floating down lo future generations, will iuspire the student of history with admits atioD, -the patriot American with veneration . .y lor ma auicesvora, auu iuu tuvor ui repuoiican liberty, with gratitude for those who in a fresh baptism of blood re-consecrated the powers and energies of the Republic to the, cause of constitutional freedem., , Long, may It be the happy fort u no ot each and every om of yoti to live in tne run iruition or the twumiicst blessings you have secured to the human race. !! - Only he whose heart has been thrilled with admiration for your impetuous Bud unyielding valor in the thickest of the fitrht can appre ciate with what pride I recount the brilliant Is , achievements which Immoitaliw you, and en--; , 'j rich the pages of our National history. Pass-, jog by the earlier, but not less signal triumphs' r ', qf the war, in which most of you participated ' 1 and inscribed npou yoflr banners inch vk'M oriet as Donaldson and Sbilob. I recur to nro campaigns, seiges.and victories that challenge ' , tno aumirauou ot ins worm, auu riich ids uo-willing applause of all Enrobe, ' Torningyoor ' back npon the blood bathed heights of ViCkJ burg, you launched into steglqn twarming) j wilh enemies, fighting your wty and marching. fj1? without adequate .supplies, to answer the cry '. , tot succor that came to y oil from tlie nOblo but beleagnred army at ChattauoOga ' tTnr steel ivsxt flashed among the) mountaint Of toiii.i 'i' i l r i i . Itiuuesm-H, buh .your woarj innos lAtum re l befoi-e the embattled heights of .Missionary, . - KKige, and there witu duunuess courage you breastal : agaio thti-eoeroy't destrnctive :fire; and shared with your comrades of tbn Army of ; the Cumberland tho glqriest of a victory,' than which uo soldiery can boast a prouder.; , i ' ' la that Unexampled campaign of vigilant '' and vigorous warfare from Chattannooga to Atlanta, you fresh'eoed yoar laurels at Rssao- ; - ca, grappling with the enemy behind his work.,. j burling him back dismayed and broken. Pur-1 suing him from thence, marking your path by the graves of . falleu tomrades, you again tn- ''" umphed over superior numbers at Ballai, ii .& fighting your way from there toEenesaw v mi .. 1 H..3AK , t. i : 1 1 jnvuuiuiu,. auu uuuer iuw muiueruua arfctlierj y .. that frowned from its fugged heights, with a tenacity and constancy that fladt few parallels 11 VI iMitj iuia vi aw ivutuvi i j uiiuauuiiMVi ptAUl exposed the couutry in your front audhough- until at last you planted your colors upon its, j ,j topmost heights. Again on the 23d of July," 1803, rendered memorable through all time '' l for the terrible straggle you so heroically ; ''' maintained under discouraging disasters,-nnd that saddest of all refleotions, .'the'loss'of that ' exemplary soldier and popular leader, the la-meuted McPubrsob, your matchless courage)')' turned defeat iuto a glorious victory.. - Ezra-Chapel and Joiienboro, added pew lustre to a , , j radiant record, the anborring to you the proud . ' Gate City of the South. The daring of a des- .' perata foe in thrusting bit legions northward, "iq rivers, swamps and enemies opposed, you bold- j ly surmounted every obstacle, beut down all nnnnsition and marched onward to the sea.,:' VVitbout anr act to dim me ongmness or , your historic page, tho world, rsnglahdits oj wbeu your labors and struggles culminated at . ., Savannah, ud the old "Starry Banner" waved once more over the walls of one of our proud-' est cities of the seaboard,'. Scarce breath ''"U iog spell had passed when your colors faded V . from the coast, and your columns plunged in-. , to the swamps o the Carolinaa. 1 be sutler-; ,. ingjyod endured.th labors performed and thef ''1 success yon achieved in those morrnsses, deem.' ,; ed Impassable, forms o creditable :episodn in r I) the history of the . was. i ., Pocataligo, Sulka-.A hatchic, Edisto. Branchville, " Orangehurgh, ,, Columbia, Iieatonville, Charleston and KaP eigh are names that will ever be saggestive of the resistless sweep or your coinmns tnrouglv'iT'j the territory tha cradled and sutured, and i from whence was sent forth on ita mission of , crime, misery and blood, the disturbing and disorgariising spirit of secession and rebellion. 5 Tbe work ror which you ploegcd your bravo -;- a hearts and brawny sjmj to the government of your fathers, yoa have noble performed You are seen in tne past garnering inrougii the gloom that enveloped the land, rallying ' as tbo guardians of man's prendeit heritagv - jj lorgotttug the tlireaa nnweven ia id ioonv quitting ..the anvil and abandoning the work. tiiops to vindicate the snprooiacV of the laws, aud the authority of 1be constitution. 'Four " years have you struggled in the bloodiest and -b most dostrnctivo war that was ever, drenched , the earth With hnmaa gore; step by step yoo ' have borne Our sUucWd, until to-dny over' every lortf4s'! and arsenal that relK'llion wrenced from and over city town tnd hum--. 1 let from the lakes Io the gnlt, and from, ocean i to ocr'anprondly floats the "titnrry Kuililem"; lT Of oiimalionJ unity aud strens(tU, '. Totir rewards, my comrde, are tho wol- "' coming plnudibj f grateful penplp, theron.- la cioasnest that io taviugtin republic, yon fctvo ut woo for your ccontry . renewe d ro'iKct ' oivl power at home and abroad, that in tiin unor-' am pled era of growth and proeperily t!mt ' 1 dawns 'with' -peace, there attaches jr.:; U;nr j wealth ot priila and gl'"j thnn CTfr r-r.-) to.-to that loved boost . "I ant an Ameriraii c-U izen." ' . j , In telinqnishinif tbo impWiants f.f war; f-if those of pear, M yoar e&yil jet he t! i nf .warrior ia t,m of war, n, ) pp,.f ;.,! rins in timo oi pf t. that blight nani'! that i"rs be t)imm''d hj e -) fne, but a.i ti""' r1' i 1.1 i:!i!(-r u J ! Voir h: vT 'A t nil 63